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l'fl •
,~THE SWARTHMOR
Ingat~eri~9 ~
November
...
,
9th.·0" .
Ingathering
Y
November
:
9th
!',
.
,
1&50 PER YEAR
. SWARTHMORE, FRIDAY, NOVEMBE~ 5, 1954
Not From Mars
'Holiday Decor~tions'
Highlight Annual
Fund-raiser
Residents are forewarned by
Borough Seerebry ElUoU Rlchanlson that If a loud and unusual sound Is heard cominl
fl'Olnt.he cllredion 01 the CoIlege Po~er Bonse, It Is nothing
,
to be alarmed about. '
The new air hom to be used
as a fire alarm Is about to
undergo some tests.
to'
BI-Indp.laolst
· ·In
Club Concert Tues.
The Swarthmore Branch of the
Child Reml.d.r
'Mel;1lbers of the Swarthmore'
Branch 'of the Needlework
Guild are reminded that t~e
annual Ingathering is set for
Nov~mber'9 and that the special
need this year is for school and,
PupUs' Sell Magazines.
For School This Week
I
Will P h
ncome I urc ase
Needed Elementary
Items
Needlework Guild, Mrs. A. Sidney Johnson, Jr., president,' and
the Woman's Club of Swarth- camp clothes for boys and girls
more, Mrs. Frank G. Keenen, between the ages of seven and
Third through' sixth g r ad e
12 years, infants clothes, sheets,
With ''HoUday Decorations" as
pr~ident. will hold an open meet- and
p~plls of the Coll~ge Avenue and
sick room supplies.
ing Tuesday, November 9, at 2
Rutgers Avenue Elementary
its theme, the annual Holiday
Fair, sponsored by the Woman's
p.m. in the clpb house. This is the
Schools last Friday launched a
AuxiliarY of Trinity Church,
annual Ingathering of the Guild
ten-day, magazine. subscription
North Chester road, will be held'
and. there will be an interesting
drive which continues through
on Wednesday, November 17,
display of all articles collected.
this week-end. Pupils have been
from 2 p.M. to 9 p.lp-. and ThursThe program will be given by
gratified by the success of their
day" November 18~ from 10 a.m.
the pianist Estella Mayer, ~acefforts to help provide extras,
to 5 p.m. This fair not only pro- True War Suspense Drama Bride on the subject "Music and Young Haverford Place needed at both schools but not
"ides the answers to Christmas
0
I
Poetry from tlie Standpoint of a
Mother Active in
possible under the limited funds
shopping prayers but the proceeds I
To pen at P ayers Blind Artist." Mrs. MacBride, a
Ch h
of the local School District.
further the work of ,Ute auxiliary I
'Clu~ Monday
resident of Philadelphia, studied
urc
Elementary Principal Thomas
in the church, diocese, and mlsat Temple University and the UniServices were held yesterday A, Boyle on Tuesdoay remarked
"Stalag 17" will ,be the Novem- vers1·ty of Pe'nnsylvanIa. Before a ftemoon at 2·30·
sions.
.
m the S warth- the success of the first two day!r!
ber production by the Players
P b t ' Ch h f Mrs
Many ,original and gaily decor- Club of Swarthmore, beginning losing her sight she '\Vas a teacher more res yerian
urc or
. returns and expressed appreciaated booths will await perusal November 8 through Saturday, and accompanist.
Walter, Landon Douglass, Jr. of tion to the community for its co:",
through amusing gifts for adults November 13, 1954. A large and
Mrs. Mac:'Brid~ has given many Haverford place ;hO died ;uer operation'in the project, w~ch almall fry. There will be dolls
h'I
I h·
N
day afternoon,
ovemQer , n though used' widely by schools.
capable cast has been assembled recitals in .p ,I ~de pIa,
ew Presbyterian Hospital which she
and S
with wardrobes, boys, baked to enact this true life masterpiece York, Atlantic CIty... an~ other had entered on Saturday, The-Rev. had not been tried previously by
goods, infant wearable, himdsewn under the direction of .Toseph W. cities in Pennsylvania, Delaware,. Joseph' P. Bishop conducted the Swarthmore.
aprons, books, and holiday decor. deFUria, assisted by Donald H. and adjacent states. Currently she !oervices.
,The combined schools brought
While adults check off the CJ:trlst- Pugh.
is giving special programs for
Born :Plargaret Brown, daughter in $550 in sales on Monday and
mas list, children can amuse themThe play w~ ,written by Don- children of t~e Philadelphia p~b- of Mr. and Mrs. Harry F, Brown, $485 on Tuesday. The ~chools'
selveS 'at th~ caildy table, fish aId Joseph Bevan and Edmund I lie schools in addition to programs on' September 15, 1924, in Wood.. share, ranging from 30 to 50 per
pond, or mOVIes.
Trzcinsky, who ,were prisoners of 1in out-~f-town schools.,
bury, N.J., Mrs. Douglass came to cent depending 'upon the publicaThe noted author and lecturer, war in the real Stalag 17. The
Mrs. MacBride says that, her Swarthmore with her parents ln tion sold averages about oneAnne Wertsne~, ~ood, will t~lk, story's framew
on Holida~ Decorations Thursday, lates an event that took place there music composition. She has had she was graduated from SwarthMargaret Yeatman's sixth gradNovember 18,.at 10: 30 a.m. in the and the original draft of the play pubiication awards for her poetry, more High School in 1942 and at- ers were responsible for the high-,
Cleaves Room of the church.
was written in that prison camp and is included in a Texas anthol- tended Mary Baldwin College,. ,est amount sold at the College
Mrs. Valentine L. Fine and Mrs. where the authors experienced the ogy.
' Staunton, Va. She was married in 'Avenue School on Monday and
• Walker Pentleld are serving as co-' material, lived the plot, and knew
Estella Mayer MacBride has not the Presbyterian Church in 1948. 'Philip Swayne's sixth grade folchairmen of the fair. Mrs. Wil- 1 the ,characters.
_
only accomplished a successful She' and her husband established -lowed suit on Tuesday. Mrs. Bess
Ham W. Watkins is. president of
ClStala~ ~ 7" has drama, s~- adjustment ,to complete loss of their home in Seafprd, Delaware, ~eidel's fourth grade at Rutgers
.the Woman's Auxiliary.
pense. mtngue and comedy 1D
(ContinJled on Page 7)
were their son, WaJter Landon ,took'the honors on both days at
'l'he following committees and ample ~e~sure to catch and hold
I
III was born. and moved to that school:
chairmen have been' combining keen audience interest and reSwarthmore last July. •
Mr. Boyle urge.s any unsolicited
their energies for pre-holi,day en- ~olves arQund a grou'p of' Am~-.,,_, ~.9pce
Before her marriage,)4rs. Doug(Continued on Page 7)
deFurl·a, Pugh to ,
O·Ir8Ct 'Stalag ,11'
Serv-Ices For" Margaret
Brown DDUgIass Th'U.r
Ann'
Plan F
, '. s or
joym~~:." ' ','
1~2rsco:r :~ge:~t!':mS::'Childien'6~1Jook 'Week ~~~r:}l:~~Oo~ a!~e ::k~ M h' Club 'Pia "
The Children s Arts ~n~ Ct:afts World' War Two detention camp,
The directors of the Swarth~ a leader of the Hlgh School Fel-,
ot ers.,
n
Table. Mrs. H. L. ,HarrIS, Mrs. L. whose'security has beenbreeched more Public Library Assoc!atio,n lowship. Since coming back to Meet-the-Press Prouram
I,
"
N. Robinson, Mrs. J. H. ~had, and
Mrs. L. L. Walmsley; Gifts, Mrs.
E, A. Eschmann and Mrs. A. L.
Clifton; Small Fry Shop, Mrs.
S. D. ReYn,olds and Mrs. 'Frances
E H t
Lumsden; Dolls,~. W .,. e zel, Jr. and Mrs. W. R. McHenry;
(Continued on P,age, 7)
by an informer.
'decided at their meeting Octob~ Swarthmore to live, she had been
l)~
The detection' of the secret Ger- 26 in the Library to add two eve- a member of the Young Couples
A new type program "Meet the
'man agent becomes the main ning sessions to the library's Group' of the, Swarthmore Pres- Press" with experts of the press
"busineSs" of the play, but there schedule effective the week of byterlan Church ot which she is a interviewing experts of Europe.an
l·S much more-,tense and harrow- November 22, T~ wlll mean tha t member.
life will be sponQnred
by the
.......
ing moments are interspersed with
'
ill b
In addition to her husband and Swarthmore Mothers Club on
bursts~ of humor and "horseplay." the public library w ' e open four-year-old ,son, she is survived Thursday evening, November 18
A ,PW's lif:'
l'S at, best a cO,urse,
evening
in th~ week exclu- by her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Brown at 8:15 p.m. in the American
11:,
ut each
sive of
Saturday.
dirtY~ terrifyirig existence, b
Exciting plans for the llbrary's of. North Chester road, a sister" Legion Room of Borough Hall.
even in the midst of danger, gloom
lth Mrs. Arthur Jennings of Spring- The meeting is open to the comand treachery,' the characteristic celebration, in cooperation w
field, N.J., two brothers, Harry F.
Drill Aid,s Blind ~erican bounce ~!lt'~, up 'agam
. Bookways. of' qblldren's Book Brown, Jr. of Media and William munity.
Appearing on the panel will be
"
"
,
. an'd agal'n.
,',
Week November 14-20 were an- R. Brown, a seQ,ior in hig,h, school.
A maSs demonstration of preci-'
.,
nounced by Librarian Bettina
Dr. Kimberly Roberts, head of the
sion drill and, group' 'obedience
Hunter~ In addition to the Li'
department of modern languages
will feature
Dog Ol)edience
brary's displays of
at Cedat:crest College, Allentown;
Exhibition 'at the Swarthmore
'
books supplemented by Bookways
Henry Honiik, instructor at HavHigh School GYJIl on' Saturda!
exhibit of children's classics in
U
erford College; and Mrs. Alfred
evening NovelPber 13,' at, 8:30
'
,.' I
d H'gh Sch~ol new editions the library will hold
Roy McCorkel, chief of CARE l;\pyd. 1'hey will be quizzed on
,
th S
th
The Chance an
I
"
'
f
I di
d Paki t
h re E ropea 111
d ffal'rs by Mrs
p,m. Sponsored, by
e war ' o f the; Swarthrnor~ Pres- a Book Week Open House on or n a an
san, w 0, u
n .LUe an a
.
more Lions Ciub for'the ?eh~fit of.' Cholr~. Church invite commu- Tuesday, night, November 23, Any cenUy r~turn~ to ,swarthm?re Daniel C. Johnson, commercial
h ' th' 'concert adults in the Borough are invited from India, f~r a bnef speaking manager of a Chester radio stathe Blind Fund, the intncacles ~f brterla~
" , ,
.
nity friends to ear err
'
'
t
ill
ak t th Swarth ti
and Mrs Pa I Zecher im
group obedien~~ ~s well .as 10,
at 8 .m.,in McCl1han Hall to inspect tqe e~hibit at leisure our, w, sp~
a.
e
on,.
."
,dividual performance will be tOO1ght
p
,
and to hear-and enjoy brief talks more Friends Meeting House at 8 mediate past ,president of the
demonstrated 'by members of the of the lChurch. bers will' include by Miss Hunter and Mrs. F. W. p.m., Tues~, November 9. on Swarthmore Mother's club, who
.
'
'..
Cl b
Secu ar num
"India After' Twenty Years"
has had many years of exp'er1'ence
Phllaclelphia Dog Trammg
u'..
,
ever Walk Alone" from Pennell of Bookways.
",...
who are donating ~eir time and Yo~ II Nand Fred, Waring's ar:Additional study was given to
Mr: McCorkel spent a ye~r in the newspaper and editorial
services for this' worthy cause.
Crousel,
of "Hit the 'lload 'to the bu?get presented by ~asurer teachi~g, at A~ahabad, Nehru s field.
The Philadelphia club is one of rangemen~ n B tt' Goodall di- Philip H. Jewett. and, Assistant Home city ProVlDce, tW,enty years
Dr. Roberts has traveled extenmany similar organizations in t~e Dreaml an ~SiC:t ~~: High School, Treasurer Robert Brodhead, at a ago, a.nd he will pres~nt his ob- sively in France, and recenUy
United S\ tes whose objective IS rector 0 f ,m
.
h 1 Ch" in board meeting 'on October 5. The servatIons upon ,r4fCent trends and spent a year in Europe gathering
to train d a d teach their own- wiIllead the High Sc o?,
dOlfthe- budget was adopted for the fiscal changes in Indian life in contrast material for a book. He received
ogs an
th "Woodchuck Song, an
to his
r . ri
. th t his'MAo ana Ph.D. degrees from
ers hpw dogs are trained to o1;Jey
e
I Choir' in a French com- ye~r and the tre~er's r~port
ear ler expe ences m
a.
commands either while on, leash
"Madame Jeanette!'
for the first quarter was received. country. ,
.'
the UniverSity of PennsylV8I!!a.
or with t I sh S ch dogs are position
II . clude
Woman s Intema~onal League During World War Two he was a
not a ou~
~e neighbor- Sacred numbe~ v;,1 vlD ghsn
for Peace and Freedom is sponsor- broadcast monitor for the Foreign
nu
eo,
'mc "For All tJ,e Samts"
au
ing the lecture as a community Broadcast Intelllgence Service. Dr.
hood and do not create tra ve Williams; Cesar Frapck's "0 Lord
,
'
event as well' as part of their Roberts h8s held teaching poslhazzards; conseque.ntIy! they ha
Most HolY"; "Jesus Wept" from
SwarthmO~ decided for school study program upon Asian coun- tions at the University of Pemia longer and ~appler life.,.
of Three Fuguning Tunes by, ~arl~ union with Rutledge 1314 to 402 tries. All who are interested are sylvania, Temple University, and
The immediate benefiCiaries
A erican com P 0 s e r Billings, and cast its traditionally Repub- invited to attend.
Indiana University.
the Lions' ~lind Fund are men;~ "~ce to Every Man and N~~ion" lican vote o~ Tuesday but shared
Mr. McCorkel has had a wide
Mr. Hornik, who is an instrucbers and tr'aInees, of the Delawa
b York. and the Negro spmtual election's suspens~ with the rest 'variety.. of experiences and train- tor at Haverford College, has re_
C?unty ~ranch 'of the PennsYivaWant 'Jesus to Walk With Me," of the nation as ~e returns, fo~ ing in foreign tlelds. 'He has b~ tu~ed recently from, Europe
nla Association, For The BHnd,
ged by Lynn.
' ' ,
even Univac to change its mechan- EUropean Directpt· for' CARE and where he had a Fulbright Schototaling over 1000 men, women. ar~nrol Roan; wife 'of Eugene ical ,mind.
' ,
"
'N;g'istant Exectitive ..'Dlrect~r in larship for a ye~s study 'at the
and children with impaired: ,Sight oa~ Church orga~ will be. The aorought~ total ~tlon charge 'ot ,Public Rei;Uons. He has Sorbpnne in Paris.. He has recetvor totally blind who live 1D the R
ted as guest soloist in ,two is 2798, 1139 are ftIdstered in the wort-ad in '.rameva and served ed, ,his B.A. and M.A. from, the
. e presen
reclnct· 885 voted 1061 ' 4'- ' , ,
C
county. One_ ou~tanding sel"Vl
cular numbers.
'.
wester P
, ,',
.,
with 'the American J'rienruf Serv- University of Pennsylvania, and is
of the Association is its home- se
ombined 80 VOIce Choir are registereclln the northern pre- ice Committee. He attended Yale now working
hiS doctorate.
teaching program, including pre-. .The c the ''Battle Hymn ot the cillct; 782 vote4 698 are re~:; Divinity 'School and, Harvard
Refreshments will be, served
in
in ~...:
paration in school subjectS. Chil- WlRn:bU!" Donald Mathis. mlnis- ~ ed
~rectna:' was where he studied Bc:onOmlcs.'
after the meeting with Mrs. Beldren receiving such J,nstruCtion ; : of ~usic, will. direc;,!':: vat . ~IHO
, c
Mr.' )tc:COrke1, ~ his' f&Dilly, w8rct 'Cornelius, beadIDg the reare prepared, for regular clasS~
will be glven r
2101." :- . ,
ectiDn'
wlll wn1 'return ,to IpdiB, this month treshm~t committee. 1I'rs.' B~
a1n fot an
room
Participation which enables numbel'S tl . some will ,have
Complete el .
,retums ...to...l!_ where' be
HeiDemann,' ....-....... as moderator. ,
tb
interpreta ons,
be
In ,~ 'p1aeem UW5
. . - ........
em..to earn high school dIplomas scentc backgrOund., "
" JssD.e;. ,
tended
wiD be in Charge of the p'fOll"lllDand take advaneed ~ ~t
Ad.:....t...don is,' tree.
,
Dog Obedience
moms IN CHORAL'
ONIGHT
;th~
~ew childre~'s
'CONCERT T
Ch~~ce
't
peaks
Roy McCorkel S .
T esd
I di
ay on n a
OK SCh00I UDIOn
-
"i
=
on
wUrrem
foUali
tecbnt~ ~ im~eoi1. . '
~
tlme.-
"
.-
,
ex-
-
I
•
Personals
Tokyo, Japan, now at PendIe Hill. Church. The ·Rev. Joseph P. Bis- the ceremony at the home of Dr.
Mr. and Mrs. R. S. Wright, Jr. hop performed the ceremony.
and Mrs. Cramp.
of W~le avenue receJ:Itly re,The brtde was given ill marti,
. AND
l~edrldftom.!.~'W'*t·h·vaCvt
8UIOllt-' .age ,by her fathei-and. "'-ore' a ' I I R T H . . .
,.-'
n ~~~ a.:WIUJ,e ...~ ey S • ~edding' g\)WD.of: :Ujht';ivory
Mr. ahd .~. Edw~d S. Stouch
ed .....-:·end Mrs. Jo&ep"
...
.,. ~Icholas, C.hantilly lace made"Wi't'h a t·lgb·t· of Lansdowne,
announce the
formerly of Cornell avenue.
JUting bodice, yoke of ill'usion'
5.....
. .... ' .. dl
CharIes Russe,
II son of Mr. an d short sleeves' with lace gauntleb birth of a daughter, Eve-Anne
wO.... mo..... e 0 It
Mrs. Roger Russell of Haverford and a wide skirt of floor length ~abet.ht' ODf 0pCloberl 211 atHthe.
. I C"urch '"
place will play the role of Yakor
. Umversl Y 0
ennsy van a os• th Oberln C· II
. rod"
ner.short veil of.J,lght Ivory tulle pita!. Mrs. Stouch is the former
T"u.r.s., .~
..'_o.·. v!'ll, .1954
m
e
0 ege p
uction fell from a tUlle. . "ea.ddr
trim·_
'
of "The Sea .~
.......... by· Che
khov
Betty Anne Casper. The
'D
.. a.G. r 4
.. ,~.
. med with pearb. ,.She carried
a MiSs
..
-- P ....
"l'
Charles, a junior .at Oberlin, Is bouquet of wh,ite,ch~sBllthemutna baby's maternai grandparents are
. Dinner --7 P.M. .
majortng in: Eng}ish.He has play- and varloi«ated :'"lv.:,; lealie.i,'nler·_ Mr. and Mrs •. S·lIetman Casper'" .AII
. .;a.. t. ·,.·JI,~~.·ft. l.·...·. 1, .5,0
ed ~ other' productlons of the
.....
of .Riverview road:: '
"I'
,
. •
T
Dramatic Asiiortation during the. spersed ~I~ t~e, .' :
~~~~~~~,~..~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~g;;;~
past two yearS. .
. Mrs: Thomaa' '!.ee'·.Reeves of Ii
,
,.. ... ·.t;.
14r. and Mrs. Robert A. Det- Garden city;' Pa.:· siBter-ni-Iaw of
weiler ot' Cornell' avenue enter- the bride; was 'matroli' of honor.
tained at diimer on Sunday in She Wore a rose crystalette dress
honor of their 15th wedding .anni" with Ii tight tiiting' bqdice, short
versary.
sleeves and a wide skirt and shlr'.. BEAUTY' SALON
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Little and red panels of tull.e. lier matching'
children of Glenburn, Pa. spent headdress was of rose crystalette.
IT'S CARING THAT SAYES THE WEARING
.the weekend at the home of Mr. She carried" a 'loose bouquet 6f
.1.:
J-J
; :~{:;
'H:J
..;(,~
Little's. pare~ts; Mr. . and Mrs. beige and rose chrysllnptenlUnis.
Ralph Little of Pal'k avenue.
The bridesmaids were Mrs. Earl
9 .South Chester Road
Chipper ForwoD:d, son of Mr. Veazey, of Newry, Pa., sister of
.CaJIJ;Warth!'l.ore {O:9476
and Mrs..F. G .. Forwood, celebra- the groom: Miss 13ettejo Goodall
ted his 7th birthday on Monday; and Miss Elizabeth· Jean Hunter,
Octoher 25,. by entertaining a both of Media. They wore the
group of hi. ~ends at a birthday same model gowns in rose crystaparty."
lette as that worn by the matron
$ . so
Miss Gretchen Kletzien of Wis- of honor and matching 'crysialette
consln, sister of Dr. Seymour W. headdresSes. Their bouquets were
PRESTONE"
ZEREX
Kletzien, is visiting at the Klet- of beige and rose chrysa,nthe. ,. "
, 1"
-zien home on South Chester road. mums.
,.
.
."
f Mwr'lllnandfMrsrd' Jte·Udsrt~~ edR.' ¥~.:
o
8
g 0 e.n
week their
.
cousins, ~. and Mrs. William M.
H uges 0f H0 Ilyw ood , Ca
lit. Mr.
'Huges designs ilrid produces trail_
ers for the major motion picture
and T. V.studlos·in HoIIyw·ood.
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Kohlor,
~
formerly. of SW"':ihmore, entertained' .. as theft ':\y~end_ suesis,
Mr. andM.... G. Wi14 Brodhead'
,and cllilclren, Geotge anlt Charlotte, and"Bennie'lInd Eddie Eck~
enhoff, at th
young members of the' families
helped decorate a neighbor's barn
in preparation for a Hallowe'en
party, .the· men and boys inaugurated the hunting season by bagging pheasant and rabbits.
Mrs. K . .1. Crothers was hostess
to the November meeting of the
Medical Auxiliary to Taylor Hospital at her home on South Chester road on Tuesday, for dessert.
Mr. and Mrs. F. W. Chapman,
Jr. of Westminster avenue entertained Mrs. Chapman's parents,
Mr. and Mrs. L. H. French of
Salisbury, N.C.: over the weekend.
Mr. and Mrs. James B. Douglas
of North Chester road will entertain their bridge club Saturday
evening.
Names Attendants
. Mrs. Charles Heisler and h e r " ' "
"
two children of Glen Falls, N.Y.
Miss· E"dith 'siuh' Mitchell of
will visit her mother, Mrs. Hugh "Jem Hill," Haverford, will act
Downing of Riverview road, next as maid of horior for her sister,
week.
and Mrs. John A: Mitchell, Jr., of
Mr. and Mrs. Nonnan W. Krase Bryn Mawr, as matron of honor
TUR~EY
_to"
A •.•••..
U%SWiNiEiiSi;'iS'~iQWS
A'~rQ REPAIRS
Mr. Lawrence Pearson Feer, of
,
South Orange, N.J., acted as best
man for his brother. ,The .Ushers
inc.luded Mr. John Carl Rutledge
of Morton: Mr. Thomas Lee
Reeves,
of
Garden
City,
."~,
. .
.Rq~E,~T
J,
",
,I
.~
An.. QW/ler
RusseWs'Servlce
.
" J ( ~~ ':r
Whee' Balanc:lng
Fa.,
Auto Lite Batteries
.. r.· •.
$W·~~0'440
1.
brother of the bride: Mr. Earl
Wesley Veazey of Newry, Pa.,
brother-in-law of the groom: and
Mr. John E. Burkam of Rutledge.
goWn of
Mrs. Reeves wore
navy blue taffeta with a matching
hat. Her corsage was of pink
~ ~~
f""
~'r\'.!
'.
Da,rtmouatfl and Lafayette ~venlle5
... .
. .. .
.
.
I •
'
~,~
a
i=qR
**
r'
w.
FIDST DU' OF
\;17:
A
. ".'.R!,. W.;..I.T,..r:- Y.O. U. R CAR.e
.. T.'''·
will
IN.$
as ,'0
a:!::r~n~!t
.::'in::~'s~~o:i~ru:n~U;:~~er:f
Nahant; Mass.; Mr. and Mrs.·How,
"r~ W. EJkinton: and Dr. and
" Mrs. J(lsephStokes, Jr. of Ger- .
. ,!I1antown and theft children and
. grandchildren. GuestS also were
·Mrs. Algernoll Evans of German. toWn and Professor Yukio :Qie of
I'''~~~~~~ii~~~~~ii
t...
klel......leI. th.
"J.bn..
c."iHI,
1'.all"-I'I.s cart....,
& Captain America Serial
.'
OF SWARTHMORE
•
."
f.,IR CONDITION~D
Fr'I'd
d'· S
rd'
. . ay an
atllQY
Walt DI~ ••,·.' Late.t
c'....
PLAYE~S'CLUB
, .'
lIE fIRFWI
won WAIT'
It will be too late to Increase your Fire Iunrance aI~er you call the
pres.ents
SAT; NIGHT ONLY-FlAruRES 6+10
f::~.~h:J.=~=
SJALAG 11
Slinday and Monday
S,..c•• Tracy - J..... 'eten
"BrOke..
. Bure tIuit.yoU·hae enolllb
amanc. IXI' ,001'.1> :r~
placemellt _te..
. .'
. r .'."
La.e."
(IN T£CKNICOLOR)
Joseph W. deFuria
.
. DIrector , .
Mon.day,
November
~ -'. ~,),'.
'. '. ::
A 'owemolStory of ...
8
~lipc"Clvers$everol
~·.fl
J,l/:.·
.... ,.
';
13
-,-
. C.rhlhln_ 1:10 P.M.
\~
¥,
your draperies and
times 'pefore 'YQU~uy neW
. . " . '...
. '..
.
P~CO~T'N.G? SJART.~IJfl YQU~ ~~PET!
• ...... aI j.lio ... c...I* ......... ei.11
........ S.-"w••t·
·100 ~ A...;,S••l ........ p.,'
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Nt'ltlH·ir:r':,.A
".
5, 1954
THE SWARTIIMOREAN
I'tlBLlSHED EVERY PRmAY AT SWARTIIMORE. PA.
PETER E. TOLD, MARJOJUB TOLD, PUBLISHER8
Phone SWarthmore 8-0900
RosaliePeirsol
•
PapS
'IHB SW AKTlll\IOREAN
PETER E. TOLD, Edllor
Marjorie Told Ellen S. Simon
Saily Alden
Entered as Second ClasliMatter, January 24, 1929, at the Post
Office at Swarthmore, Pa., under the Act of March 3. 1879.
DEAD~~NESDAYNOON
SWARTHMORE, PENNA., November 5, 19"
The Cherub Chotr wIlI rehearse
~t 3:30 p.m. on Thursday and the
Junior Choir will rehearse at 4
p.m.
nesday morning. The Bible Study suffering will be emphasized at
group will meet at 8 o'clock Wed- ChrIl;tlan Science services Sunday.
nesday evening in the Rector's
study.
The LessOn-8ermon, entitled
"Adam
and Fallen Man," includes
A service of Even.lng Prayer
The W.S.C.S. annual Turkey
Dinner and Bazaar will be held will be held on Friday at 5.30 p.m. the following passage from the
at the church on Thursdlg wliii
KIng James Version of the Bible
seatings for dinner at 5:311' and 7 CHRISTIAN SCIENCE NOTES (Geuesll; 1:27): "So God created
p;m. Information may be obtained,
man in his own image, in the
from any member of the W.S.C.S.
Man 8 true aelfbood as the splr~ Image .... God created' h'e hlm',
.
Ituai Image and likeness of God,
u,
The Chancel ChOIr will rehearse "ever free from sin sickness and maie and femde creafed he them."
at
8 p.m. on Thllr&day in the• !Co
l$~'~~~~~"~'~~~~'~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Chapel.
,Mr. Kulp Will conduct the second Fellowship Instruction Class
prospective members on Thurs_
day evening at 8 p.m. The theme
for discllssion will be "What It
Means To Be A Church Member,"
and will be illustrated With the
sound o.lm strip, "Seek Ye FIrst."
Next Friday, November 12, the
Young Adult Bullders Club Will
hold a Square Dance In the .Soclal
Hall. '
I
'1
. PRESlnERIAN NOTES
High Fellowship will begin the
,
.
group meeting with supper In
Two Morning Worship Services McCahan Hall followed by a choir
will be held on Sunday morning rehearsal cfuected b
Do ld
at 9: 30 and 11 o'clock. The topic Mathis and then will ~
na
of Mr. Biahop's sermon tbis week gram ~f fun and faith. T~~ a:.:;
will . ~e "In Grateful TrIbute is made up of young people In the
Bring.
7th, 8th, and 9th grades.
Chureh School Classes Will be
On Monday night, November 8,
held as usual at 9:30, 10:45 and the Couples Club will have a
11 a.m. Also, Men's Bible Class covered dish supper a;'d Square
and Women's Bible Class will meet Dance in McCahan Hail, starting
at 9:30 a.m.
at 6:30 p.m. Anyone wishing to FRI.,NDS MEETING NOTES
Sunday evening, the Senior make reservations should contact
Due to an unforseen delay In the
High Fellowship meets for supper Mr. and Mrs. Paul Pitts, MA 3- alterations at Whittier House,
at 6: 30 p.m. in McCahan Hall. The 1161. The Church School Cabinet there will be no Moving-In party
program following Will be entitled meets for a regular monthly meet- on Saturday morning. Contrary to
"A Christlan Looks at HIl;' Pre- ing on Monday evening at 8 p.m. the announcement made last Sunjudices." An excellent o.lm Will be in the Women's Association Room.
shown in connection With this.
The Board of Trustees will meet day,
meet FIrst
iJl. the
House
on
DayMeeting
School will
again
The Young Adults group meets for on Tuesday evening, November 9, Sunday mOrning at 9.45 a.m.
Bible Study at 6 p.m. under the for their regular monthly meet- There will be no Nursery School
leadership of Mr. Bishop. Supper lng, immediately following the or Kindergarten until further nowill follow at 6: 30, and at 8 0'- Every Member Canvas Dinner.
tice.
•
clock the program for this group
Wednesday, November 10, the
On Sunday, November 7, the
consist of a talk by The Rev. Women's Association Will hold the first of a series of four ,Forum
John C. Kulp, minister. of the Executive Board Meeting and lectures will be delivered by HenSwarthmore Methodist Church, on monthly luncheon. Luncheon will ry Cadbury. The subject of this
"The Wesleys as Heroes of the be served in McCahan Hall at first lecture Will be the Gospel of
Faith."
12: 30 by Circle 4, Mrs. .1. Paul Mark. Friends are asked to gather
Also, at 6: 30 p,m. the Jnnior I Brown, chairman. The program In the chemistry Building, adjawill be a talk by The Rev. mys- cent to the Meeting House, at 9: 45
es
Blakeley, Director of the Camac a.m.
CHURCH SERVICES
The High School Fellowship will
Center in Philadelphia, who is
PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH
In their room in the basemeet
representing Metropolitan
Joseph P .. Bishop. Minister
John Schott. Associate Minlste1: slons In the city of Philadelphia. ment of Whlttier House at 7 p.m.
A ftlm will be shown entitled on Sup.day.
.
Snnday, November 1
Philadelphia General Meeting
"City story!'
9:30-11:00 ·A.M.-Church School.
Thursday, November 11, the opened on Thursday, November 4,
9:30 and 11 A.M.-Mr. :Bishop
Choir
Rehearsals will be held' for
. will preach. Sermo~ topic: "In
Sessions
will
continue
the
Cherub,
WeJtminster and at
Grateful Tribute Brmg."
the Arch
Street
Meetingthrough
House.
9:30 A.M.-Men's Bible Class and Chancel Choirs. The second of Sunday, November 7, at which
Women's Bibl~ Class.
the Every Member Canvas Din- time Thomas Shipley Brown will
0:00 P.M._Young Adults Group. ners Will be held in McCahan Hall give theW!Piam Pen" le.itu~i
6:30 P.M.-SeniQr High Fellowat 6: 30 p.m., and at II p.m. the entitled "The Relevance of Truth
ship,
,
6:30 P.M.-.Jnnior High Fellow- Christian Education' Committee to Thee."
On Tuesday, November 9, Joint
shlp.
Will meet in the Women's AssoQuarterly Meeting will be held at
ciation Room.
METHODIST CHURCH
Westtown
School. The session will
JOHN C. KULP, B.D., M.A.,
open at 10: 30 a.m.
Mlnisler
METHODIST NOTES'
EDWARD THORNTON, A.B ..
On Tuesdav evening, November
Assistant Minister
Tonight, Friday, November 5 the 9, at 8 p.m., Roy McCorkel will
MRS. RUTH G. NICELY,
Omcial Board Will meet In the speak in the Meeting House on
Organist-Director of Music
Chapel.
his recent trip to India. ThIl; lecSunday, November 1
Sunday School classes begin ture Is sponsored by the Swarthat 9:45 a, m. on Sunday more W. I. L.
9:45 A.M.--Church School
11:00 A.M.-The Rev. John C. There Is a new Builders Cia.. for
On Thursday, November 11, at
Kulp will preach. Sermon topic:
., Its
4 p.m., there will he a choir re"God Wants Another Election." young BuU •
7:00 ,P.M.-Yo.ung People's FelT
At the 11 a.m. Morning Wor- hearsal In the Meeting House for
lowship will meet.
ship, Rev. John C. Kulp, pastor the 5th, 6th, an.d 7 th grades.
TRINITY CHURCH
will use as his sermon subject
"God Wants Another Election."
TRINITY MOTES
H. Lawrenl'P Whittemnre, Rector
.
rl
f
Sunday; November 7
There will be two nurse es or
A celebration of the Holy Com8:00 A.M.-Holy Communion.
children under the supervision of
munion
wili be held at 8 o'clock
9:30 A.M.--Church School (3rd Mrs. Henry I. Hoot and a selected
and
again
at' 11 o'clock this Sungrade and up.)
.
staff. The revised Junior Church
11 :Op A.M.-.Holy COl)lmUDlon.
program Is under the supervision day at' TrInity Church. At 9: 30
children in the Srd gr;>de and up
U:OO A.M.-Morning .Prayer.
of Mrs. Alton Smith.
/
11:00 A.M.--Church School (2nd
Ushers for the morning service will meet for Church School, and
7rs~d;'.~P ~~g People's Fel- will be Lemuel Holt,. head usher, those in the 2nd Grade and down
lowship..
'.
assisied by N. Martin Kapp, Wal- will meet at 11 o'elock. The reguTuesday, November 9
ter Snyder, Tlieodore Haddad, lar meeting of the Young People's
5:30. P.M.-Evening Prayer.
Wesley Simon and Jack Elander. Fellowship will be held al 7:30
'.
~.
WednescIat, November}O
Mr. and Mrs. .1. West Loveland pm.
Ushers
for
Sundlly
will
be as
7:15 A.M.-Holy Commumon.
will greet at the door.
John
Aaron,
S.
D.
Clyde,
follows:
8:00 P.M.-Bible Stndy.
The Methodist youth FellowFrIday, November 1Z
ship will meet at the church at Jr., J. E. Eckenholf, R. H. Fellows,
5:30 P.M.-Evening!"'.ay':er.
7 p.m. Nancy Ernest will be the T. W. Hopper, A. H. Knabb, R. B.
THE RELIGIOUS SOCIETY
discussion leader for Sunday even- Price, Jr., and C. C. Wallin. Andy
Hopkins will serve as acolYte at
OF FRIENDS'
ing.
.
A
.
Sunday, November 1
.
The College' Cl)rlstian SSOC18- 8 o'clock, and Michael Reynolds,
9:45 A.M.-Adult 'Forum. will tion Campus Meeting will be held George. Hansell, and William KIug
will be on duty at 11. During the
meet in the Chemistry BulIdin.g. In Bond Hail at 7 p.m.
Mr. Kulp will have office hours 11 o'clock service Martha Calhoun
9:45 A.M.-FIrst Day School m
the Meeting House.
7 8 m and Elizabeth Gibson will assist
H:OO A.M.-Meeting for Worship. for counseling from 4-5: - ,p. .
Tuesday in the Church Study. in the nursery.
All are welcome to join with us.
7:00 P.M.-High School Fellow- onThe Coltage Prayer Meeting for . The Boys' Choir Will rehearse
ship.
adults will meet on Tuesday at on Monday and Wednesday at 4
o'clock and again on Thursday at
Monday, November 8
0m at the home of Mr. and 7:,30 p.m. The Girls' Choir rehearAll day seWing for A. F. S. C.
8:3
HarloW 315 Lafayette
Tueao1al" November 9
Mrs. ay
'H
will .,,1 will be !kId on Monday at
10:30 A.M.-4~lnt Quarterly Meet- avenue. Mrs. Charles oover
5 p.m.
ing at the Westtown School.
be leader..
/ eDinS
The Arts and Crafts classes will
Wednelll!ay, November 10.
At 8: 30 p.m. Tuesday ev
, meet on Tuesday at 3:30 p.m. At
All day sewing for A.F.S..C.
Kulp will.' conduct the fIrSt 5: 30 a service of Eveo!ing Prayer
~, NOvember 11
Mr.
Instruction Class for
4:00 P.M.--Cholr Rehearsal in the FelloWSI?P new membet's. The will be held. The Evening Group
Meeting House.
prospective theme will be "What of the Woman's Auxiliary will
. FIRST CHURCH OF
discussion To Be A CbristIan" n- meet at 8 p.m. in the Cleaves
Roam. Mrs. MaXey Morrison will
CHRIST, SCIENTIST
It Means with the sound motion
•
lead
i!t!l group in a di~OIl of
SWARTHMORE
lustrated
in of the Rainbow."
Park Avenue be10w.lIarva~d
film "Begin" II
to all pre- the service of Ho17 CCJIDIIlunillP,
811JM1Q, Nevember 'J.
These cJaSSe8 are open others inmeeting td "Perl to au - .
n;oo A. M.-Sunday School.
sent JIlemhers an~.~ta with 110 of the psrJah. '~8ny thJise whO
.00 A.M.-The t.esaon-SermOll" erested in these .....'
unable to IItteDd daytime meetWill be "Adam and Fallen Man· t
tion to join the church., t
. .meetlrlll obliP esdaY at 'I p.m. Boy Scou .
8~~~~:.~~~
WednS ...
the SOcIal
.I!l
TrOOP
..I11)11eet
~
i
I
. LAST CHANCE FOR
NEEDLEWORK GUILD
Garments available now
in all sizes
Make your selection now
I
UTILITY SHOP
19 South Chester Road
I\~r:~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
,
I
wm.
OLIVER H. BAil
founded our organization
76
years ago•. The same family
operates It today.
•
THE OLIVER H. BAIR CO.
DJUCro.. o. :ruNIUU
1820 CHISTNUT STREET
OliVER It. lAIR, _ . . '
MAAY A. lAIR, ProoId...
,,1
Telephone RI6-1581
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~!9i
I
(P~~~~" &.C"J:e!!
au
.
· SaturdQ,y; "'ov~mber
to
. car..pe.t.
,
Even 'I fyou
'
t
d f
t 't is
a~e no rEla Y or your carpe '. I
i~portant to s~lectit SO that. you tan make your
()~her dec.ision's wlth CQnfiC;l~ii.c~. , , " , .. ;
. . '
... .. .... ' ..
PAUL~ON off~rs a FR,t;~ ~,~co~Q!ing~ookl,et and
other helps when you 'visit our'$to:r~' qrhave
someone comet.o your h.ome. wi.th 'carpet samp: les.
.,
. " .'.,
~ro.gII
·
y~ur
a
cincJ cei~ing,cind' replace
. ' .. Swarthmore'."Pa' ,-.",
'''.he Vanishing Pralrl."
~~!I,E,D-''Wml. ... 'Op.ratlc
",,~l~"-Eiltlre Sh.w I. T.e.,
rHE
C~~ose
CQILtGE TllEAT~r. ~
Tn•. Lite Aelv. .te.. · ....
)l/ovember
~AZAAR
of Middletown road returned from for her sister-In-law, at the mara six week tour of England, riage (If Miss Jean Row Mitchell
Switzerland, and France on the of "Jem Hill," Haverford and Mr.
Queen Elizabeth, 'with Queen Charles' Evans' Gillespie, son of
Mother Elizabeth a fellow pas- Mrs. George 'Gillespie of Strath
senger, which docked 12 hours late Haven avenue, and. the late Mr.
in New York last Wednesday.
Gillespie, on' Saturday, .December roses.
Mrs. Feer chose a slate blue
Mr. and Mrs. William' BuIlock 4, at 4 o'clock' In the Ridley Park
•
taffeta
goWn with a darker blue
THEATRE SQUARE
are now settled in their new home Presbyterian' Church. The Rev.
,"
on Sykes lane and Avondale road James Harold Guy will' pe"form hat and a corsage of gardenias.
A reception followed the cerein Wallingford.
the ceremmiy.
The bridesmaids Will be 'Miss mony at McCahan Hall. in the
Mr. and Mrs. K. M. Fox of Yale
avenue had as theft vuests last Jean L. Tyrrell 'of Merion, Mrs. Swarthmore Preshyterian Church.
week, Mr. Fox's parents, Mr. and Thomas W. 'Ward, of Rosemont,
COMLEY_MERRILL
!4rs. F. W. Fox of Akron, Ohlo, and Miss Manan B. Stevens of
C~JJ.
~nd .DE~~VERY
SERVICE
and Mrs. Fox's parents, Mr. and Ch' tn t Hill' .
..~, (:·,1:'1':.":"!
d
~.; l '
f'v
es u
..
The marriage of Miss Mildred
Mrs. B. J. Gadllis of .~t.. Ohlo.
.Mr. 13eorge Gillespie of Pitts- B. M.errill of Kennett Square and
Ample FREE Parking
Mr. Ernest E. Olds of Chicago b ....h -'~" b . th . b' t
U." Wll.< e
e es man for Mr.. Roy C.CoDlley of 'Swarthwas the weekend guest of Mr. and his ·brother. The' ush~rs will inMrs. Ernest A. lBberg of South'
..
.
more took place on Saturday, OcSWClrthmClre 6.3154
Chester road. While here, Mr. Olds elude' ~r. John A. l\IJltchell, Jr., tober 30, at 11 a.m. in the Swarth.,. ~.j:, ... ~:.) ... , r"~'q 'r' ,.~ 'r ~
attended the Navy-Notre Dame of :Bryn Mawr, brother of the more Presbyterian Church. The
footbail game with Mr. Ioberg.
bride: Mr. John K. Desmond, Jr., Rev. Joseph P. Bishop performed
Mrs. Robert Kamp of Riverview of Chestnut Hill, cousin of the the ceremony~
uln!JiiIlIiii'I1~lI!lljjjj!l.~dlilflft·qlllillli~lIllll1nliln.ollllll'1IJIlIIIIIIIIIIIIBHUWIIIDIIIIIIlIIlHlllIUIIHIIIIIIHUlIU
road has been confined in Lanke- groom: lI!Ir. JopnN!. Powers, Jr.,
Those in attendance were Mrs. •
.•
. ,. . . . " , '
':.,.. ..•• ,.,
, .... ,
t. __
. " " ' ..
'.,
of
Lansdowne;'
Mr.
Howard
T.
nau Hospital following an operaMary B. Smoot, sister. of the
tion.·
.
Cusi~ of ~ichigan: Mr. ·Thomas bride; Miss Arta Bortner of'WIlC
nErQRATIN~
Mr. and Mrs. Irvin Loveland of : . Ward ~f Rosemont: and Mr, mington: Mr. and Mrs.
H: .... ~~ "
~" li'"~ r ..... ,~ . . . . . • "1.1 .
Wallingford, VI. were tile guests . lan·J. Klr&c,h of Narberth.
Ward 'of Strath Haven avenue;S.,T
,~T,..
U
.. : . .
~.
of·Mr. and Mrs. .1•.·Harlan Jessup
A reception will follow the cer- an\l .Dr; I\1ld Mrs. David Cramp
" " .
.
~ Haverford avenue on Tuesday emony . a,t' ..the Rose Tree Fox of PlJfk avellue.
.,
.
Hun;ing 9 lub.1n !\:lellia.
A wedding breakfast. followed
. C;arp~t sh~",ld\lethe flr~t item you $elect· for
night, October 26. .
. Johnny Thurman, son of Mrs. E.
' .
..
"
your lionie;' .for the rooms'
begin to look
Neal Thurman of·.CeParlane, celFl!ER-REEY'S
flJrni5he~ YI~~n you s.P.~.fl:t.a"d) ~a~p~t COI!lr a. nd
ebrated hislSthbidhdayiast SatThe nilirnage' of . Miss Jean lIrIR8, u.OYD E. KAJJFFIIIAN
~.. "
'
urday by ~le);tal"ing a group ~f TraInor' 'D. ee;'es, daugh't'e'r of ~"r·. ala DarlmouthAVenUe .,: . '
~exture on t" . .e ~I~or.
trivolves an imporlant
his friends fo" 11,lilch. Mier lunch
'.'
....
S ..."iiLmore 8.2010'·,
...I. ••• . t ' , '.
't
t
•
· they all attended the Swarthmore.. and Mrs. Horace Albert ·Reeves of
.,.
~ecl~lo.l1, ~9.f ~~fpe represen sa' malor expenWesleyan foOtbill game,
Swarthmore to Mr. Frederick Nic" :.g:~~IPTJ~N!I
ditJre as well r
la r~e ·'(f.ecorative room area.
M
d ~ .1 P
hollIS Feer,Jt., of Swarthtnore, son lIIAGAZINES
.'
,'. ,.
.,
into!' :'Harv:".i
of Mr. and Mrs. Feer' of South
colc;u ,that
re9Uy{ike, cmd preftaJned at the Stralh Haven 1m; On Orange,. N~J., took place on Sat-II
erab. Iy one that is becoming
you: Of course,
Saturday, . Oct<\tK.r 30. Included urday; October 30, at 3:30 p.m. in
r
among the guests were thelr chlld- the . Swarthmore Presbyterian
,t !jjUS.t hQr.monize with the bther furnishings you
ren and grandchildren and Mrs.
have, or wiUbuy, but}oJ\.jill r~6.iit~fiYoJrwans
~.
..
•
,/
•
I'
\
...
Do You Know .' . • ?•
.~
v.
'.
PREVENTION SERVICE-
~.4
"~.,
Does save time and inconvenience.
iJ
,
"~i
,
\
GOOD VISION-
. ..-l
Does your windshield wiper wipo dean?
'.1
~,
EXHAUST SYSTEM-
"
i~
'.
Remember, you drive with windows closed: carbon mon...
. oxide fumes from lealey 'exhaust can be dangerous.
;:,""
(
'~
~1
.,;
TIRES and WHEEL' AIoIGNMENT-
".'~
T~ stop on wintry' roads you must have traction.
,
._L..
'.~
ANTI. FREEZE
'.
.r
,".
'j
Just- putting in Anti·Freeze is not enough: cooling systems
. should be checked.
,
I'!
~
.:
~
t;
WINTER LUBRICATION-
~;
"
Don't make your car work ag/linst stiff oil and grease.
!!'
l'.1.
~
<
ARE YOU ONE OF tHE 3 PERCENT WHO
i.,
,
~.
HAS TAKEN CARE OF HIS CAR?
~.!,
.. ~"
Stote Inspection Starfed Novemlter FIrst·
:~
,
Pit'
& WAITE .
Yale Ave.
& S.
Chester
•
SWarthmore
6-1250
Rd.
,
\I) ..
•
-
•
,. , .
SllDIInllnmnIU!"",III~UUIIOlUlI,!,!,!~umHIIlmu~
I
PICTURE FRAMING
..
PROTOGUPHIC
.......
R8fD
I~
FIO,.iiI-r
Ii
I
I
~
~ur~lu
~
DiLuzio and Sons
I
PORTRAIT STUDIO
I
i
a
!!I
State .. MORroe Sts.'
Media
.'
.'
. For",...',
!
CAR,."
..
650 Balthnore PI'e
Sprlngfieid, Del. Co., 'a.
SWartilmore 6-0450
i
~6:m6 ;;.;. /, ~rEyJ
0 .... ,·A.M. to 6 P.M.
••IIIIIIIIIIIIIIHlllllllmWIIIIII.nIHI.IIHIHIUIIIIHIHIIh~ .
. ,
THANKsGIVING...,..with.all the Trimmings
ENJOY IT WITH US
,.
."
Malle your reservatIons now
for tile entIre famJl,
Dinner served 1:00 P.M. to 7:30 P.M.
No'reservations after ~:OO P.M.
ing any Red Cross om.ce In the Scouts Enjoy Goblins,
city or four surroundplg c,!unties,
Spooks, Apple.Bobbing
or headquarters at Broad and
tr ts They can arrange for
Halloween was' 'ceIebrated by,
·
,With hundreds of Christmas Vme s e e : .
.
' the two SiXth Grade Troops of
parties and other special events their initial interview with
College Avenue with two Parties,
being "'rrangeq for the Yuletide Plowman, SWarthmore 6.0885.
season for servIceinen patients at
.Final interviews wll"be held each complete with spooks and
the Valley Forge Army Hospital, at the hospital on Thursday, No- goblins, apple bobbing and all the
Phoenixville, the local Red Cross vember IS, from. 10 a.m. to f fun that goes with a Halloween
chapter has ISsued an appeal f o
' from 7 to 9 p.m., and party.
p.m.,rand
!)Ooks
grayfladies
i t to help fill d the
t on Friday from 10 a.m. to f p.m.
,Troop No•. 429 held their party
rat th °i VtOltlltUDI eers now on u y
Their duties will be outlined In on Wednesday, BVenina from 7 to
a , e ns
on.
lectures to be given by doctors
.....
Mr~. George Plowman, chair-' and Red 'Cross leaders on Ttiei;.. 9 p.m. at the home of Mrs., New_
man tor gray lady service for the. day, November /la, and Tuesday, tal!' Ryerson, troop 'leader. The
Swarthmore branch said today November 30; at the hospibiJ..·
Scouts divided ,into three commlt_
that women between the ages of
"This service provid~s an op- tees: ,decoration, entert~ninent
21 and 55 are needed to work one portunity for women to do some- and refreshment. All the planning
, day
or evening
each week.
The thing wonde'rful for tho'se' men and work was done 'by the girls.
h
f
'
ours are rom 10 a.m. ~ 4 p.m., who won't be home for Chrlst- The members of this troOp are:
and 6:.30 to 10 p.m.
mas,t' said Mrs. Plowman. "Many Vickie Baker, Justine Bodley, Gail
In 'addition to helping with of them, wounded or stricken with 'Forwood, Cally MacN'llr, 'Sally
party' arrangemerits, and ward illness while fighting In foreign McCawley, Jean_Patterson, Babs
decorations, they will distribute lands, haven't been with their Richards, Mitzi RYerson, Cathy
gifts to patients, shop fOr them, families at Chrls,tmas for seve~al Jarratt, Sandra Skoglund, Abigail
and wrap.' the presents to be sent years; others won't get home for Warnes, Cynthia Topping, Nancy
home. They also read to the pa- a long time to coine.
Gatewood, Betty Bovard, Linda
tients, write letters and perform --------,;......-~--IDirkin. and Nancy Gayley.
many othei' non-technical dilties
Tropp No. 269 held Its 'party on
which allow the nurses to devote
Monday, October 28. from 7:30
their entire time to giving medical
to 9:80 at the home of Mrs. Harold
attention to the patients, Mrs.
Roxby, troop leader. These Scouts
Plowman said.
also divided Into committees and
- planned the entire p~rty, includcan sign up by calltg tg'<,"Sjis",S$Ssg,,; iDg decorations, entertainment,
refreshments and cleanup. The
members of this troop are: Charlotte Broadhead, Fosii; Cagigan.
Barbara Coles, Barbara Donahue.
Phyllis Hall. Marsha Hunt, Janet
Jester, Josie Lange, Betsy McKeag, Ellen Mondale, Gloria Piersol, Marjorie Roxby, Kathy Weich
and Susan Wright.
'
Need Gray Ladies
At Valley Forge
•I t'5
altce !,arLet"
S T RAT H HAVEN
,Walter E.
SW 6·06BO
INN
~arr~tt.
Manager,
9
~~iiiiii1ii~~~iiiiii1ii~~iiiiii~~~iiiiiiiiii~~A~pp~licants
e
'ac
an
old bank build Inc
3·· times!'
"
"
"
There are 640.000 miles of postal routes in the U. S. and they all
lead to our front door!
No, we're not planning on opening abrarith 'office on the Moon. Though
recognized as a progressive bank, we'll stick to Delaware county for the
·p;esent. The poiht is, no matter where yqulive this bank is as close as your
nearest mailbox. Banking by mail is
ea5)!,
safe, convenient, saves time ahd
·travel, lets you f~rget banking hours and ·holidays. Of course, we'realwa;,s
happy to have 'you come in and personally ·tr~nsaGt your business here. But
if that Isn't convenrent, we can take very good care of you -by mail,. as
,we do for hundreds of customers we've never seen. Waiting to hear from
you,we are
Very truly yours,
SWARTHMORE OFFICE
Rutgers Ave. & Chester Road '
A series of four lectures by
Henry J, Cadbury, world famous
Biblical scholar and Quaker historian, will be given to the adult
forum of the Sw'V'thmore Friends'
Meeting during tlie month of No_
vember, beginning Sunday, November 7, at 9:45 a.m.
Dr. Cadbury, who for_many
years was the Hollis Professor of
Divinity at Harvard University,
has chosen as his subject, "Mark,
Matthew, Luke and John." which
he will discuss in that order, devoting one week to each chapter.
Recently retired from Harvard,
Dr; Cadbury now resides at
IPen,dlll Hill'imd is also currently
teachillg at' Drew Theological
and at Bryn Mawr.
Prior to going, to Harvard he
taught at Haverford and Bryo
Mawr.
One of the outstanding scholars
of the New Testament, Dr. Cadbury was among those chosen to
work on the translation of the
new Revised Standard Version of
the Bible. He is also Chairman of
the American Friends s.\rvice
Committee.
Because Whittier House renovations are behind schedule. Dr.
Cadbury's series will be held for
the first week or so in the Lecture
Hall of the Chemistry Building on
the college campus. Those wishing
to attend the lectures will find the
Chemistry Building only a few
feet from the Meeting House, and
directions will be provided.
.
To Address Rotary
F. D. Foote, Jr.• assistant direclor of public relations. United
States Steel Corporation, Philadelphia dis~rict will speak before
the Swarthmore Rotary Club on
Friday, November 12. at its meeting in the Ingleneuk Tea ROOM at
12:10 p.m,
;!>ir. Foote will bring with him a
film depicting the story of U. S.
Steel's development of Iron are in
Venezuela. Its title is "Iron Ore
'From Cerro Bolivar." This Is, a
sound fllm in color and' is narmted by George'Hlcks who Is "Mi-.
U. S. Sleel" on radio and televislon. Mr. Foote will give an introductory talk on Ihe film of not
more than 10-minutes. and the
fllm's duration Is 28-miriutes.
Mr. Foote has been wilh U. S.
Steel since 1946 and was 'transferred from Pittsburgh to Philadelphia In the spring of this year.
Prior to Ihat, he served in the
navy during World War II and
was graduated from Princeton
Harold Ogram, 533 Rivernew road, second vice-president of .the University.
newly establislled Red Feather agency, the Community Nursing
Service, Delo.ware COUilty, with
Mrs.
ISPEAKER
SHOW
TO
NEW,,·
PRE-SCHOOL BOOKS, TOYS
,--;::w
9 A:M. to 3 P.M.
And FrIday EYenlngs
6:30 to 8:30
\
Tuesday, November 9, at 10
am, the Healtli -and Welfare Department will work on cancer
dressings and disposal ,bags in
the lounge of the club house. Mrs.
Jucisl)n R.·Ho
The Music Group Will meet at
10 l.m.'rUesdayattbe 'hbnle of
the .chairman,' ·Mrs. ,J., Kenneth
ID'OIl'ett:y;' 609 'Elm avenue.
Then!' will I;Je an open meetIU
Tuesday at 2 p.m. 'The Needlework Guild and the WomaIl'S
Club will present Estella MaYer
MacBri!Je ,IJ!., '~u~c\ and p~~
from the SliIndjKJlnl at the BlJI'"
.Artist." 'Artieles l!Ollected by the
'IG.-.ncl~'>lilJID: be 'l)n diaPlQ". '
board cif the 'ZuniOl' V/ortJB1i'S
meet
8 pm. 'fI1II/I'J#!
i.'~
it In
~e ~·,.arth!D91'e1lll'.
"-
The Parents' Council for the
How ClrlltI". Scl••c. 'Hull
Swarthmore Presbyterian Church
Nursery Day &hool extends a
''YOU CAN PROVE THE
warm inVitation 10 the parents of
POWER OF PRAYER"
the children of. the school and all
olhers who are free on November WIP 1610 KCI S....oy. 9,45 A.M.
S' at 3:30 in the afternoon, to attend a timely and interesting talk _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
by Mrs. Francis W. Pennell. Mrs.
Pennell will describe and show a
group of new hooks for the preschool age child which she willI
have sel~cted with Christmas giv',.Camera. I< Hobby Shop
ing In mmd,
.
Also of interest will be the disAve., Sworth",ore
play of .toys which Mrs. Pember- )~~~~~~~~~~~~~
ton M. Dickinson will bave avail- J '..
able for examination.
' The meeting will be held in Mc$600 MONTHLY
Cahan Hall of the Swarthmore
Presbyterian Church and tea will
Starting salary for :I exec:uti.,...typ.
be served following the talks.
,alumen to repr.,.nt lar\1' Eashrn
~he officers of the Parents'
flnandal cotporailon. No travel. Sales
Council of the Nursery School for .. ,errenee (lind abiltty desired. I.tot..
1954-55 include; Mrs. Donald lI.heef mkfent, 2S-4O Ylan old, mar·
Twaddell, of Swarthmore, chair- rltd, capabl. of a"umTng rII.ponslbllrna... In _rIIqu1dfn9' intl,.,l.. pleoM
man., She will be assisted by Mrs. Includ.
brl.f ,enonal history, all
Robert Wood, and Mrs. Valentine . ,",pUes' .conRdlnlal. Our lar.unln ha ....
Fine 01· Swarthmore, Mrs. Isaac been Informed of this ad. lox A. L
TOYS
6;Pan
I
NEWS NOTES
Carl H. Schmitt, (center) 90
Pap $
Roach c.f Newtown Squar.e, and
SwarthmoNan.
Diana Reyoolds, daughle~ of Mrs. Elhs Turner of Wallingford.
Mrs.
George V. Krenikoff of Yale
Sonth Rolling road. Springfield, first viae-president, and, Mrs.
avenue, is attending school In
francis Forsythe, (right), 410 Thayer roa.d, recording secretary, Denver, Colo.
. Mr. and Mrs, K. A. Krieger held
'view mocl'ern. Incubator which is only one of ma.ny facilltles ke~t
a get-together on Sunday afterrea.dy In the agency's loan closet o.t 60 South' Lansdowne avenne, , noon to, introduce to friends and
tI
'
"
neighbors, Mr. and Mrs. James
for po. ents who need such eqnlpment in emergencies, or who mo.y Gassaway wlJo will be living' in
not be o.ble ta allord to buy or rent the necessary f';"UIties.
their guest howle at 400 Riverview
__~__________________~____~_____ I~ro=ad='~~====~~==,1
"EARLY BIRD" BUYERS GET
BEST SELECfIOt4S OF SMARTEST
NEWS NOTES
Ensign and Mrs. Allan Rampf
and small son William, now stationed In Washington, D.C. having
been transferred from Memphis.
Tenn., spent last weekend with
Mrs. Rumpf's parents and the
Krase' other daughter,
Mrs. Herbert Michener aDd her
Ihree children arrived by plane
from Palmyra, N.Y., accompanying Mr. Michener on a business
,,1>,. II fl. ".sf glff
trip, to visit for three days.
A
Mrs. Frank Starrett, Jr. of MarIetta avenue Is entertaining at a
tea this afternoon in honor of Mrs.
William A. Clark. Jr, who is a
0.. can
new resident on' Strath Haven
avenue.
Mr. and Mrs. James O. Stephans moved on Tuesday from
their home on Fairview road to
a new home on the comer of
Marietta and Rutgers avenues.
•
~4tm44~
g'" af ChrIstmas tI....
Bible Gift Center
106 E. 9th Str••t
CH.st.r 3·2396
WE FEATURE FINE QUALITY GIBSON CARDS
~===========~
For " "reelsharp"
I"wnmower
MICHAEL·S COLLEGE PHARMACY
Call
on Ihe corner in Swarthmore
REELSHARP, SW 6-4100
Small Motor Specialist
WE DELIVER
SW 6-0857
:..
.,
,~
(
f~
·Ii
~
Free· Special Prize
"
H
~i
'1
'J
'.t
·~
I,
"
:;;t-'1
t;·t
~I
,"
'
1955 Chevrolet to'Be Awa(ded locally
"
,
-,
..
...
I
d
;.)
;,j
"
~
Ie
· .!
,~
_.,.
1
,,
,
,;
..,,
)
Before depositing your Treasure Chest ticket. obtain your .:.ddHional .FREE c.h,ance on a new
.
-"".,. -. . ,
.
.
~
. t _,
· ~j
."
i;
c;tlucky pers(m D:EP.O~ITING their National Treasure
1955 Cherolet to beawa~dedlocal!yto
.
. '.
."
.. .
•
.
,;
•
I
' - .
. , . .
'
<\
.~
.
l!
:~
, .'
"
~
Chest ticket with
'-',
\
'Woman's Club Notes
'HOURS:
-•
Biblical Scholar To
Lecture at Forum
.'
THE SWARTliMOREAN'
November 5, 1954,
THE SWAR111MOlU!:AN
J'.'
'.
,
RUl11seyCft.8vrolet
•1
_.
~
•
SWarthmore, 6-6130
South~ dester Road
,
,
•
IF YOU HAVE NOT R.CEIYED YC)UR TRII;ASURE CHEST
TICKET. COME AND SEE US TO OBTAIN ONt;o
,.
~,
.'~
"
'
,.1
,•
.... -,
INTENTIONAL SECOND EXPOSURE
-
November 5, 1954
TIlE SWARl'HMOREAN
Pnge4
Need Gray Ladies
illllllllll;~~~;~III=;~~IIIIIIIIII~ 1-----------At Valley Forge
_____________________
i
~
~
November 5, 1954
PORTRAIT STUDIO
PHOTOGRAPHIC
SUPPLIES
~
DiLuzio and Sons
Florist
is
is
CFARr~ 5
; ROGER RUSSELL!
~
State & Monroe Sts. ~
Media
~
=
~ .~. ~,.. -~ -.
Oren -
=
650 Baltimore PIke
Springfield, Del. Co., Pa.
SWal"filmore 6·0450
§ME 6-2176
Fr . Eve~ .
Open 8 A.M. to 6 '.M.
f.iIllIllIlIlIllIllIllIllIlIllIlIllIllUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII~ ~::s::la:e::i:s:s:s:;;a:c:i,a:;=s::s:s!l
THANKSGIVING...,....with all the Trimmings
ENJOY IT WITH US
Make your reservations now
for the entire family
Dinner served 1:00 P.M. to 7:30 P.M.
No reservations after 7:00 P.M.
STRATH
SW 6·0680
HAVEN
ing any Red Cross office in the
city or four surrounding counties,
or headquarters at Broad and
Vine streets; They can arrange for
Halloween was celebrated by
With hundreds of Christmas
the two Sixth Grade Troops 01
parties and other special events their initial interview with Mrs.
College Avenue with two parties,
being "Itrranged for the Yuletide Plowman, SWarthmore 6-0885.
season for servicemen patients at
Final interviews will be held each complete with spooks and
the Valley Forge Army Hospital, at the hospital on Thursday, No- goblins, apple bobbing and all the
Phoenixville, the local Red Cross vember 18, from 10 a.m. to "- fun that goes with a Halloween
chapter has issued an appeal for p.m., and- from 7 to 9 p.m., an d party.
.~O gray ladies to help fill the on Friday from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.
Troop No. 429 held their party
fanks of volunteers now on duty
Their duties will be outlined in on Wednesday evening from 7 to
at the institution.
lectures to be given by doctors 9 p.m. at the home of Mrs. NewMr~. George Plowman, chair-· and Red Cross leaders, on Tuesman for gray lady service for the day, November 023, and Tuesday, ton Ryerson, troop lea~er. The
Scouts divided into three commit_
Swarthmore branch said today November 30, at the hospital.
that women between the ages of
"This service provides an op- tees: decoration, entertainment
21 and 55 are needed to work one portunity for women to do some- and refreshment. All the planning
day or evening each week. The thing wonderful for those men and work was done by the girls.
hours are from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m" who won't be home for Christ- The members of this troop are:
and 6:.30 to 10 p.m.
.
mas," said Mrs. Plowman. "Many Vickie Baker, Justine Bodley, Gail
In addition to helping with of them, wounded or stricken with Forwood, Cally MacNair, 'Sally
party arrangements, and ward illness while fighting in foreign l\.'!cCawley, Jean Patterson, Babs
decorations, they will distribute lands, haven't been with their Richards, Mitzi Ryerson, Cathy
gifts to patients. shop for them, families at Christmas for several Jarratt, Sandra Skoglund, Abigail
and wrap the presents to be sent years; others won't get home for Warnes, Cynthia Topping, Nancy
home. They also read to the pa- a long time to come.
Gatewood, Betty Bovard, Linda
tients, write letters and perform
Dirkin, and Nancy Gayley.
many other non-technical duties
b
Troop No. 269 held its party on
which allow the nurses to devote a Ice
ar i e
Monday, October 28, from 7:30
their entire time to giving medical
to 9:30 at thc home of Mrs. Harold
attention to the patients, Mrs.
Roxby. troop leader. These Scouts
Plowman said.
also divided into committees and
planned the entire party, includsign up by call:%%%%$
ilGlnC ing decorations, entertainment,
refreshments and cleanup. The
members of this troop are: Charlotte Broadhead, Posie Cagigan,
Barbara Coles, Barbara Donahue,
Phyllis Hall, Marsha Hunt, Janet
Jester, Josie Lange, Betsy
Keag, Ellen Mondale, Gloria Piersol, Marjorie Roxby, Kathy Welch
and Susan Wright.
I'
INN
Walter E. Parrott, Manager
f
9 ItS
b
old bank
~~$i$~\~~$~~~%~%~%~%~~~~~~~~iii~~~iii~~~~~~~~A~%P~:~:I~':~:~n~t:~%~c~::
To t e
ack 3 timesr
an
There are 640,000 miles of postal routes in the U. S. and they all
lead to our front door!
No, we're not planning on opening a branch office on the Moon.
Though
recognized as a progressive bank, we'll slick to Delaware county for the
present. The point is, no matter where you live this bank is as close as your
nearest mailbox. Banking by mail is easy, safe, convenient, saves time and
travel, lets you forget banking hours and holidays. Of course, we're always
happy to have 'you come in and personally transact your business here. But
if that isn't convenient, we can take very good care of you -
by mail, as
we do for hundreds of customers we've never seen. Waiting to hear from
you, we are
Very truly yours,
SWARTHMORE OFFICE
Rutgers Ave. & Chester Road
HOURS:
9 A;M. to 3 P.M.
And Friday Evenings
6:30 to 8:30
Swarlhmore • MlOIA, •• NNSYLVANIA. Springfi.,d
c .........
".re' II,'IU
•
Scouts Enjoy Goblins,
Spooks, Apple-Bobbing
, ......, ill ,...... ".,.." , ....._
c.".,.,...
Mc-
Biblical Scholar To
Lecture at Forum
A series of four lectures by
Henry J. Cadbury, world famous
Biblical scholar and Quaker historian, will be given to the adult
forum of the Sw~thmore Friends'
Meeting during the month of No_
vember, beginning Sunday, November 7, at 9:45 a.m.
Dr. Cadbury, who for _ many
years was the Hollis Professor of
Divinity at Harvard University,
has chosen as his subject, "Mark,
Matthew, Luke and John." which
he will discuss in that order, devoting one week to each chapter.
Recently reth'ed from Harvard,
Dr. Cadbury now resides at
Pendle Hill and is also currently
teaching at Drew Theological
Seminary and at Bryn Mawr.
Prior to going to Harvard he
taught at Haverford and Bryn
Mawr.
One of the outstanding scholars
of the New Testament, Dr. Cadbury was among those chosen to
work on the translation of the
new Revised Standard Version of
the Bible. He is also Chairman of
the American Friends Service
Committee.
Because Whittier House renovations are behind schedule, Dr.
Cad bury's series will be held for
the first week or so in the Lecture
Hall of the Chemistry Building on
the college campus. Those wishing
to attend the lectures will lind the
Chemistry Building only a few
feet from the Meeting House, and
directions will be provided.
THE SWARTHMOREAN
Nursing Service Offic~rs
To Address Rotary
F. D. Foote, Jr., assistant director of public relations, United
States Steel Corporation, Philadelphia district will speak before
the Swarthmore Rotary Club on
Friday. November 12. at its meeting in the Ingleneuk Tea Room at
12:10 p.m.
~l". Foote will bring with him a
film depicting the story 01 u. S.
Steel's development of iron ore in
Venezuela. Its title is "Iron Ore
'From Cerro Bolivar." This is a
sound film in color and' is narrated by George Hicks who is "Mr.
U. S. Steel" on radio and television. Mr. Foote will give an introductory talk on the film of not
more than to-minutes, and the
film's duration is 28-minutes.
Mr. Foote has been with U. S.
Steel since 1946 and was transferred from Pittsburgh to Philadelphia in the spring of this year.
Prior to that, he served in the
navy during World War II and
was graduated from Princeton
Harold Ogram, 533 Riverview road, second vice4president of .the University.
newly established Red Feather agency, the Community NursIng
NEWS NOTES
Service, Delaware County, with Mrs. Carl H. Schmitt, (center) 90
Page 5
SPEAKER TO SHOW NEW
PRE·SCHOOL BOOKS, TOYS
The Parents' Council for the r
How Christian Selence -Heals
Swarthmore Presbyterian Church
Nursery Day ~chool extends a
"YOU CAN PROVE THE
warm invitation to the parents of
POWER OF PRAYER"
the children 01 the school and all
others who are free on November
WIP 1610 ICI Sunday, ',45 A.M.
8 at 3:30 in the afternoon, to attend a timely and interesting talk
by Mrs. Francis W. Pennell. Mrs.
Pennell will describe and show a
group of new books for the preschool age child which she will I
have selected with Christmas giv- '
Camera & Hobby Shop
ing in mind.
6, Park Ave., Swarthmore
Also of interest will be the dis-
TOYS
play of .toyS which Mrs, Pcmbcr- ;~~~~~~~~~~~~~.
ton M. Dickinson will have avail- i
able for examination.
I
The meeting will be held in Mc- 1
$600 MONTHLY
Cahan Hall of the Swarthmore
Presbyterian Church and tea will
Starting salary for 2 .ncufive-type
be served following the talks.
lolelmen to repre,en' large Eadern
The officers of the Parents'
finonctQI c.orporation. No travel. Sale,
Council of the Nursery School for
ellperience and ability desired, estab1954-55 include; Mrs. Donald
lished resident, 25-40 years old. mar.
rled, capable of assuming responsibil.
Twaddell, of SWarthmore, chairilies. In 'equesting interview please
man. She will be assisted by Mrs.
brief personal history, all
Include
Robert Wood. and Mrs. Valentine
replies confidllinial. Our salesmen have
Fine of Swarthmore, Mrs. Isaac
be.n informed of this ad. Bor: A. l.
Swarthmorean.
Roach of Newtown Square, and
Diana Reynolds, daughter of
Mrs. Ellis Turner
Mrs. George V. Krenikoff of Yale
avenue, is attending school in
Denver, Colo.
South Roiling road. Springfield, first vice-president, and Mrs.
Francis Forsythe, (right), 410 Thayer road, recording secretary,
-==========
I saw it in The Swarthmorean.
Mr. and Mrs. K. A. Krieger held
a get-together on Sunday afterready in the agency's loan closet at 60 South Lansdowne avenue, . noon to introduce to friends and
neighoors, Mr, and Mrs. James
Cor patients who need such equipment in emergencies. or who ~ay Gassaway who will be 1iving in
.:o:f_W.:.:..::a:::lI:::in:::g~l::::o....rd:::.-,,"=============,
view modem incubator which is only one of many facilities kept
"EARLY BIRD" BUYERS GET
BEST SELECTIONS OF SMARTEST
not be ahle to afford to buy or rent the necessary facilities.
their guest house at 400 Riverview
________________________________________ I~ro~ad~.~~~~~~====.
NEWS NOTES
trip, to visit for three days.
Ensign and Mrs. Allan Rumpf
Mrs. Frank Starrett, Jr. of Marand small son Wil1iam, now sta- ietta avenue is entertaining at a
Honed in Washington, D.C. having tea this afternoon in honor of Mrs.
been transferred from Memphis, William A. Clark, Jr. who is a
Tenn., spent last weekend with new resident on Strath Haven
Mrs. Rumpf's parents and the avenue.
Krase' other daughter.
Mr. and 1I1rs. James O. Step-
Mrs. Herbert Michener and her hans moved on Tuesday from
three children arrived by plane their home on Fairview road to
from Palmyra, N.Y., accompany- a new home on the corner of
ing Mr. Michener on a business Marietta and Rutgers avenues.
•
~~
A BIble Is th best gift
One can give af Christmas time.
Bible Gift Center
1 06 E. 9th Street
CHester 3-2396
WE FEATURE FINE QUAlITY GIBSON CARDS
i=============~
For a "reelsharptl
lawnmower
Call
MICHAELIS COLLEGE PHARMACY
on the corner in Swarthmore
REELSHARP, SW 6·4100
Small Motor Specialist
.
WE DELIVER
SW 6-0857
Free Special Prize
1955 Chevrolet to Be Awar.d,ed locally
Before depositing your Treasure Chest ticket, obtain your additional FREE chance on a new
1955 Cherolet to be awarded locally to a lucky person DEPOSITING their National Treasure
Chest ticket with
Woman's Club Notes
Tuesday, November 9, at 10
a.m. the Health and Welfare Department will work on cancer
dressings and disposal bags in
the lounge of the club house. Mrs.
Judson R. Hoover, Jr. is in charge.
Workers are urgently needed.
The Music Group will meet at
10 a.m. Tuesday at the home of
the chairman, Mrs. J. Kenneth
Doherty; 609 Elm avenue.
There" will be an open meeting
Tuesday at 2 p.m. The Needlework Guild and the woman's
Club will present Estella Mayer
MacBride in u~usic\ and poe:t'Y
from the Standpoint of the Bl1nd
Artist." Articles collected by tbe
Guild will be on display.
The board of the Junior Woman's
Clilb will meet at 8 p.m. TuesdB1
at the home of Mrs. Edward CoI-
Rumsey Ch.evrolet
.
SWarthmore 6-6130
South' Chester Road
•
'theatre Square
Pqe6
rm:
No"ember 5, 1954
THE ,SWARTBMOREAN
Mrs. Zecher Heads , Trinity Holiday Fair
Christmas Seal Drive
,N6vember 17 18
Mrs. Paul' Zecher of Swarthmore avenue, 9hrlstmas Seal Educational Director for Delaware
county, will entertain 64 club and
civic leaders at tea af her home
on next Monday, Tuesday and
Wednesday. " ,
Local leadel'll il) the drive include Mrs. Charles Dettra of Rutledge, Mrs. Ralph T. Mathews of
Wallingford, and Mrs. Edward
Cratsley and Mrs. Carl J. Atkins
of Swarthmore. The participating
leaders of Delaware County will
set up Christmas Seal booths, arrange for Bangle Pin Days in Ibe
schools, and distribute coin boxes
and posters to shops and stores in
the vicinity.
•
Girl Sc:out Leaders Meet
,
(Continued from Page 1)
Aprons, Mrs. H. H. Gibson and
Mrs. A. L. Clayden; The Attic,
MJS. R. T. Bates; Food Falr, Mrs.
W. M. Harvey, Mrs. A. H. Knabb,
Mrs. C. W. Worst and Mrs. H. G.
Hopson; Holiday Decorations, Mrs.
R. J. Baker and Mrs. W. C. Hogg,
Jr.; ,Periodicals, Mrs. R. G. Halg;
Books, Mrs. Burris West; Candy,
Mrs. J. W. Haubner and Mrs.
Rufus Wixon.
Children's movies will be
shown under the direction of Mrs.
Arthur D. Moscrip. The "coke bar"
will be supervised by Mrs. R. H.
Fellows and Robert Borer of the
Young People's Fellowship. Mrs.
Orlando Shoemaker will read
handwriting
at the gift table.
,
At the Neighborhood Meeting
held last Thursday, October 28, at
the Presbyterian 'Church, Girl
Scout Leaders and Troop Committee members were given mimeographed sheets containing complete information on the organization of Girl Scou~ing in Swarthmore. Of special interest was a
"resource sheet" which listed outdoor camping .sites in this area,
places of interest to visit and suggested, hiking trails.
Mrs. John Carroll, Neighborhood Chairman, ~irected attention
to a list of "services" which the
Troop Leaders would find helpful'
,',
1st Grade Meeting
-,
The officers of Mrs. Janet Willcox's Rutgers Avenue 1st: grade
class have scheduled a meeting
for the parents of the group on
Monday, October ..8, at 8 o'clock
in the Rutgers' Avenue School.
Mrs. Willcox will address the
group.
,
The officers for this year are
Mrs. Lynn Kippax, chairman;
Mrs. Leslie Baird, program chairman; Mrs. Harlle 'Reynard, telephone chairman; Mrs. Walter
Snyder, se~retary-treasurer; and
Mrs. H.' Parklll' Stamford, hospitality chairm,an., '
..
,
.
.'
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"Slow down at sundown"-still i~wonderful
traffic safety advice. When the sun goes downtraffic: accidents go up. Twilight hours ~ and the),
starft.t 4 P.Ltin,'f~1I and winter-ar~the'm:ost'
1
.
_
.
5th
Grade' Mothers
,
,
There will be a meeting of the
mothers of Margaret Moore's 5th
grade Rutgers Avenue group on
Tuesday, November 9, at 3:30 p.m,
in Miss Moore's classroom.
i'
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5..
"
,'
16% of all trafficacddents in Pennsyl~ania occur
" between 4 and 6 'P.M.. Drive extra carefully'then.
, i
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THE BOUQUET
MARTEL BRO'I'H":ns
,
!
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'. ,,' ?8W:MlTHMORE' C().QP" '-:: ' , '
":"
HORACE A. REEVES '
w.'Mill Br:hu"
a. J. HOY,S AND 10
JOYCE LEWIS
,
'
t,.,
STRAm HAVEN INN
FIRST
NATIONAL
BANK OF
. . " . ..
.,
DELAWARE
coUN'i'f
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'BAIRD and
B~
,
,,'
BUCHNER'S, INC.
PEI'EJt E. TOLD
CATHEIWAN'S DRUG
STORE
,
.
,
,
E. L.' NOYES and CO. -
, TJJE' SWAIiTIlMOREAN
lL4NNUM & WAITE
THE INGLENEUK
.
...
,
'
Blind Pianist in
Club Concert Tues.
,
'."
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5 A.L E
TWEED
SKIRTS
Earn Wesleyan Honors
p,izes for excellence in scholarshill at Wesleyan College have
been awarded to David Cox, son
8.90
of" Mr. and Mrs. Reavis Cox of
Walnut lane, and Russ Snyder,
of Dickinson avenue, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Russell L. Snyder. Cox, a
junior at Wesleyan, received the
Weller Prize for the sophomore
having the highest academic average. Snyder, a sophomore, received the Bruner Freshman Improvement Prize which is given to
the freshman who s e second
semester's record s how S ,the
greatest relative improvement
over that of the first semester. He
stands first in his sophomore class. ;!IUlIIllIIlIIUUUllIIlIIUUUlIIlIIUlllllllllllllUUlUlIIlIIl1uilllUUlIIlIlIlIlIIlIIUllllllllllllllllllnlllllllllllllUUUmUIIM!!!
Dave and Russ are both graduates of Swarthmore High School.
where' Russ' father, Mr. Russel.! L.
Snyder, is head of the German
5
Department.
Pupils Sell Magazines
For Seh'ool This Week
15 South Chester Road
I
e5=
The
.swarthmor~BusinessAssociation~=
a
Estate of percy O. Bellleld late of, ~
Borough or Swarthmore. ~d.
;:
wishes to acknowledpe the following' in refer-;;
=
LlS'lIERS Testamentary on~Athtoe § ence to the Halloween parade of last week:
above Jratate b&Vlnf been gran~
i
a
'==
the underslgned, al persons Indebted a
to the said Eotate are requ_ to
make payment, and thooe having
cla1ms to present the same, without ==
delay,
a
.
han k5 to t he l·Ions ;;
=,
We
-WIsh to extend
our
t
=
.
,
55
tb~ B. Lewan
= Club, civilic:in. defense men, Borough officials and ~=
;
206 Roberts Rd., Ardmore. PR,
John E. Gensemer
::
225 Vassar Ave,. Swarthmore. §
Pa. Er:ecutors
==
Or to John E. Gensemer. Attorney
==
1004 Girard Trust Bldg.
.
Phllad.elpbla.. Pa.
(Continued from Page 1)
residents, who would like to facilItate education In Swarthmore
through subscribing to a magazine at 10-22-29-5
for themselves or as gifts,· or rePATTERSON
newals, to contact an elementary " "
FUNERAL H~MB
school child in their neighborhood ~ ElII;1~n Yean' ExperIence
before Monday.
Phone lIIedla 6-8400
Funds will be divided between
A pr~.m:~~ve1')'
the two schools and be used toward . such educational aidS as
phqnograph records, library books,
visual aids materiaJs, pi3nos, especiallY in classrooms established
during the last few years to accommodate enrollme:r;tt increases. '
pO Iice
fF·leers, for th'
. ta
nee
elr no bl e assls
..
. .
aa
a=
.
We .are'sorry
that the award ribbons were =
.
e
not obtained in sufficient quantity to equal,the i
a
=
..
0
!==
.
5
~
~ number of adual winners. Additional ribbons 5i
~
,
i
have been obtained for those who did not re- :
eeive their award. These ribbons can be 'claimed i
§
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at the Camera and Hobby Shop, 6 Park avenue. 5
Candy Cupboard
and Treat
$1.35
Catherman's
!
The Parade was sponsored by the Swarth- ;_
5
51
I
i'iil
a more Business Assbciation whose members are: ;;
.. S,·. It In the swarthmorean."
ij.i~i.i~iiii.ii~~iiiiilii_iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii' I~
-
ICwink Presents:
1954 Hamburg Show
"BOTTLED IN BOND"
I
Charles Sullivan
Hugh NI_senson',
Last week the Brownie Scouts
of Troop No: 560 made some tray
decorations fQr the children in the
Chester ,hi!spiW" :;':
There are 15 'Brownies In Troop
No. 580. Their names are: Priscilla
K. Brobec~ Nap"y.-,v,-. Webster,
Carol Ami Morgan,'Christine ~ar
rett, Ann BlJ!sslng, Carolyn M.les,
Jeanne Draper, Julie Huse, Sara -,
Enion, Louise Hay, Patsy Holly,
Betsy Kamp, Joanne Espenschade, Ii!
Jane Aaron and Claire Walker.
~
The leaders are Mrs. Richard
Enion and Mrs. John Aaron.
Jack Hughlett
Fr·.da'y' an' d Saturday, Evenings
8
November 19 and 20
,
M
: 15 P. •
$1.20 admission
'"
E
=
E
Fo~ ~e~e;"'ed S~ats 'WRITE:
I
by November 9.,
'
'iii
!!!
j
.-
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:1
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I, ~
Ii
,,'•,
=
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::
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ii
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,
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II
assure future similar activities.
,
"-,, '
•-~':':~'~';;"~"---IIII-"IIIIIIII~~~~"·
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I, Y*,ur 'patronage of tlt.se businesses will I
,
eaclo~ ,selfoaddreued ~~"~"GIM!~
'Please
J
!i!I
,
§
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Sherwin's Jewelry
Ingle..u k ,
Hann.m and Waite
Joyc:e Lewis '
Robe....s Cleaners
Ii
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=:r~c~:n:!r.~es .Co.'
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Clothier Memorial
Halllb8..g Show
Soc:i • ., ~f Kwlnk
swart.more College -
Adolph's Barber Shop'
a
Co.op Food Market:
~='
Michael's College
'harmac:y
~
Buchner's
51
The Fountain
~
The First National Bank
1=_
of Delaware County
=
Camera and' Hobby Shop
i
William S. Bittle and Son
;:
The Strath Haven Inn
~
Celia Shoe Shop
, ,5i - , Eitw. L.' Noyes aild Co. '.
i
B.J.Hoy5&10
i
Orange Cleaners
5
'The Swarthmorean
~
, Dew Drop Ian
''
=
" Bouquet Beauty Shop'
Paulson
','
~Holly1Jock Gift Shop
~
Iii
Utility Shop ,
~
, ,Catherman's Drug Store
'"
11Ie 'Music: Box,
5
~
Sipler Hardware
=
Horace A. Reeves
!!!
M. Weinstein & Son
i
Songs:
I
Mr. and Mrs. J. Harlan Jessup '"
and daughter; MIlI'th~, of HaverfOrd avenue spent last week end
in Washiligton 'where they visited
Mrs. Jessup's mother, Mrs. Charles C. M~ of that city.
'
Mr. and Mrs. Edward E. Hannum have moved trom 18 Oberlin
avenue into their new home on
Lafayette avenue.
'
Mr., ~ Mrs. G. Vernon sweet
of Nai>~'n-L 'l!iSlted }for two
Weeks at 'the ':ho!II8 'of Jf:riJ. G. W.
Sweet of. Garrett avenue. '
... "
Book:
Brownies Dec:orate Troys 1=
,
ATZ AUTO. SERVI~,,,
Named to this semester's Dean's
List for excellence in scholarship
at Amherst College Is Thomas H.
Alden, a senior. Alden Is the son
of Mr. and Mrs. P. M. Alden of'
507 N. Chester road, Swarthmore.
To make the Dean's List as a senior, Alden had to earn at least an
average of 84 In his course work.
~t Amherst, Alden was on the
still! of the college radio station,
WAMF, In his freshman year. He
w&s a member of the Glee Club
in his Ilrst three years at Amherst and on- the Dean's List in his
sophomore and junior years. He
is -a varsity trackman. He is· a
member of Phi "Alpha Psi fraternity. He .is a graduate of Swarthmore High School.
Grade Meeting
Mrs.' Shaw's '5th Grade Class of
Rutgers Avenue. School will hold
a meeting on Tuesday. November
9, at 3:30 p:m.' in Miss Shaw's
classroom.
dangerous of all.
J. A. GREEN
Name Alden
(Continued from Page 1)
sight in adult life, but has enrich ..
ed her already brilliant pianistci
ability with that mastery and
deep understanding which comes
with the development of a truly
artistic nature.
Her custom of perfacing each
composition with a few words as
to its background and significance
always pleases her hearers. A de_
lightful novelty for women's
clubs, church, school, and college
audiences is furnished by her imin their work.
. provised-on-the-spot upiano porMrs. Edmund Jones, SWarth- traits" ·of prominen~ or favorite
more 6-5416" is in charge of Unl- members.
form E)
Mrs. Blanton Tiller" SWarthmore b e: M rs. G oon
rt
W . B rus,
h Mrs.
6-6287, Is to be called for ,pub- F. W. Melpolder, Mrs. Raymond
licity, Mrs. Allee Marriott is reg- W. Perkins, and Mrs., Robert H.
istra and Mrs. G. Wills Brodhead Reed. At the tea table Mrs. Edis troop consultant for Ibe cur- ward W. Furst and Mrs. William
rent year. A. Willard will ilreside.
_N"----
Pap 7
SWARTHMOREAN
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Page 8
I
LEGAL NOTICE
.D.,
Dece_
Driveway Construction
Asphalt or CoHn"
Cellar Walls Re-Plas..nd
Phone Swarthmore 6-2526
!
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~
unClersJ.gned,
,~o
requesta Bl1' persona
bavlng clalmo or demUlllAr J!II.1I1'lBt the
_to ot ,the' ileoeden~, to _
known the same, 'and all 'persons Indebted to the deoedent to ;naJr.e payment, wlthout delay to !Orlam Mark-
Building
PhlllLdelpbla 10. Penna.
-. -
-
\
Land 'Tltle
BHBRIPP s.u.BB
<>f ~ E!l'rATE
CHERIPP'B
COURT HOUSS.
lA. PA.
1tW::Z
Oondltlons::t260.00 cash,or- oertlfied
cbeck at time at sate (unleti8 otber_
·wtse-stated -tn· B4vertlBeli1ent) balanee :tn teD-days. otb,r CQnd~tJona_ on .day, ~~~~~:::=:::==:;::==~
in ten·days. Other condltloll8 on day 'of'1Iate..
. ,"
of .'I"1e.' '
.'. '
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'.
. PIERI PACIAB'
·c· ( " .' No. 2808
In the BOrough of Clifton' Helgbts. Pljnneylta.lla;'omdbauniied and d..County . at Delaware' and .State of crlbed as tollows, to Wit:
CHester 4·6246
~
. Roofing
Gutters
Air Conditioning
Heating
011 - Gas • burners
t
Jewelry Repaired
Phone: SW 6-42!6
Watc.niak.r
George Myers
the. last' ni,entlon,,,.j
Westwardly One hun,-
and lItty'feet to' the' Eastem \III.
of, -oak
SLIP COVER5-DRAPERIES
Swarthmore R.f.renc.,
200 W. Ridley Ave.
Ridley Paril
'hon. "aron Hllr0734
SW 6-4742
WA 8-2440
MOl. than 25 year• •lIp.Jrenee
AuthorIzed DIstrIbutors
'
HORACB
ATLANTIC FUEL OIL
and
IRON
OIL
BURNERS
and heating equl,ment
B.
'Passmore
.
RBdLBSTdTB ..
INSVRANCB
609 S. CH.IT.. R.IL
SWAJ.'lHMORll. l'BNNA.
ToIIpbotN S... &.5510 .
•
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O"er 60,000 cuatolliera in
Suburban Philadelphia prefer
GAS for houa.· healing
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PAINTING
.and
CARPENTRY
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·SWarthmore 6-8761
Alterations
335 Dartmouth Avenue
J. F. BLACKMAN,
-------P~E;R~SO&N-.7A~L------
SW 8-6616
PERSONAL -. May, I introduce
myself as, Patti. I'm in the dress
business on a small scale. (Work
from my home) My line, to begin
with is Sportworld' Incorporated
of New York, designed by' Jeanne
Campbell., Prices are less. than ',re.
tail. Won't you call me after 6:30
p.m. if you are interested. KIngswood 4·0306; .'..
.
:
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CAS ~IV'ES' fOU' MoRt
BENEFITS!
•
There 'is no fuel orderiDg OI'.SfQf8ge necessary
when you heat ·with gas. Just s~ tile thermostat
."d forget it. Gas house heatiDS- is.dependable,
quiet. and dealt. No wODder..ao· many people are
switching '-'to g~5
house
h!"ullg.
.' •
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~
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..
The cost of equipme~c, ~d,i~.ins~lI.tion for ...
house heating is IO,..e~.tllIlQ, tbec05t of compuable
automatic heating equipment using other fuels.
....
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BUDGET HEUI,,_ COSTS
It
Use the ....y BndPc .~, Cosu. nOih!II, ftUII;
,.~ spreads payo:n.,,"~1 ~ra 11,)·montll
period. Visit or pllli •• aa,:r:·.P.J!..ollice to'uratIp
as,. bndgedng ofJOU pi house
·heat!ngpa)""1 II
r.1iiI....·.....,..."
.,.,.1_
hr. A. "" etA I ,
I I . eA.
!
.
TOTAL
498
170
.
2l!9
517
84
148
lUi
402
"JlJl)GE
Woodside (R)
Woodside (D)
1
Bell (R)
Rhodes (D)
Griffith (R)
Ross '(D)
662
181
614
235
622
229
356
92
3S9
110
339
109
588
180
497
269
505
261
1607
453
1450
614
1466
599
'I'GOVERNO.R
,
Wood (R)
Leader (D)
663
186
358
90
587
184'
1608
460
· LT. GOVERNOR.
Truscott (R)
, Furman (D)
676
169
366
82
595
170
1637
421
',SECRETARY INTERNAL AFFAIRS
,Dixon (R)
674
370
Blatt (D)
172
78
589
182
1633
432
624
146
1704
362
614
159
612
162
602
160
607
154
1675
398
1670
408
1650
400
1663
394
,I
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'James (R)
· . Cappiello (D)
The Camera and
Hobby Shop
699
147
/
381
70
·,'REPRESENTATIVES IN ASSEMBLY
Lippincott (R)
686
375
Roche (D)
. 163
76
Bell (R)
687
371
Warner (D)
164
82
• Isaacs (R)
681
367
. Adams (D)
161
79
Foster (R)
684
372
Hogan (D)
161
79
now at 6 'a'" Ave.aR
Swarthmor.. Pa.
I
I
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SW 6-4191
Fri 9·8:30
I ~===========~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~i~n~g:..._~_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ Louise and Richard Howe. third;
=
Randy Pace, Eddie Shute. Billy
Ryerson, Grace McDermott, and
Blanca Storlazzi, honorable men-
foII-lincpmdttcef?fcan amitrtlCh-ON1If)1I/ICeS
BUILDER
TERRIFIC PRICE REDUCTIO S!.
BIG NEW '55 STUDEBAKER
CO
DER V-1·M~iH$28710WER!
EDWARD G. CHIPMAN
AMDSON
GENEIAl CONTIAaOI
nue. Call SWarthniore
6-3312.
PERSONAL
-Registered
Spencer
~tj~~ianY' ':"Corsetiere:: Mrs. Elsie H. Mcgl
Williams. Telephone SWarthmore
,:
,
We pass on to you the first big economies of the .
S.debaker~r.ackard combination'! .You get a bette~ and more
j)owerful NetlJCommander- gready reduced m price !
•
Now ·in direct competition
VJith the '1)ery 'lowest priced P-8s ,
- ' .. Andrew Spanier,
~~~~~~~e~~!~~ 'PERSONAL
6.;4583 Jor app_ointment.
Jr.• 1002 Girard avenue, Swarth-
more. SWarthmore 6-2198. Furniture reflnishb).g. Custom cabinet
work. General ,'Carpentry. Free
estimates." '
a magician.
the ,Holiday Fair at
Church on Thursday, November
. ··WANTED
18 at 10:30 a.m. when Mrs.-Anne·
Wertsner Wood wi 11 perform I""·. .,·
. "'.==---=-:-----:~-
magic with her "Holiday Decora- WANTED Mature couple, no
tlons". For a mere $2.00 you will
children, wlint to rent house in .,
,
th kn I
h
SwartJunore, ,lIl'ea at modest ren- ..
have
e
ow edge to go orne tal Could' reb. abilltate and per.;
and create original arrangements.
Phope ·Mrs. R. B. Price, SWarth- fecUy maintain neglected pro~
more 6-2166. for reservations. .• -, attY., Gc... Hlirst Paul. Pennsylvailia
MilItary College, Chester. CHester
FOR SALE - Boys 24" Schwinn 4 2559
.
nly
bike. Excellent condition. $20. • evewngs 0
•
Phone'SWarthmore 6-3995:
. ' WANTED ~ Inexpensive secondFOR SALE _ Full size autoharp.
hand trombone.· Call SWarlh, Almost new. $18 complete. ::m:;:0~re=6=-=29;.:8:.:1:.:..
-:-....,.,.:-~
Phone SWarlhlnore 6-3995.
WANTED - To bIlY'.seeond"hand
fOR SALE _. LioneI O-gauge
Morris Chair': SWarthmore 6*"aIns; Many extras. Best oftet. 3470~between 10 a.m. and II p.m.
Cal1 KIngswOOd 4-0169. c _ '
except Sandays.
=,..".__
DAY'and NIGHT
OIl'. -BURNER
- - -_._-
, , ..SERYICE
c.'
, llONDAY~ SATUltDAY
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Swarthmore and Vicinity
Baird
a
's greatest value .in .a low :priced
.
~
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~ •• ~~,;,~,
v-a
·
this ~ no"first.titne-out'~lJloat· ·St;ull the n\l" ':65 ~4]"~ken
z
ERE IS the JJ10st aJJ1a lnatY It bas a bUlion mUes otproftd 'alI ~ as'thi8~"" ••.
low priced'new V·8 In aU success behind It.
' ' W t h e JJ1...' ....nt-n_1IIr sf
1.merJ.ca ••• the big, '~-)';~;
Wbllt's JJ10re, this newest dent V·8-1lII4,~ big, ~,
ered 'and handsoJJ1e neW
Studebaker Coounailder V·8 f,s a nllW ChaJJ1piOll ;In 1tbe 'Iowe •.~ ...
S~baker ColllJWUlder V-S.
econolDYteam-JJ19te 01 the price field. 'Ibe new '55 Studenew gasStude.......- that W1ill·the mUst. hlken are the_luteat cars on the
cl... _.. advanced
Thi86L~
downln~Studebaker ·tll right
BWeePinA victories e,..!8ClOl'eCl·1a . leanmy-the .....est.liill:est-8lOpdirect c:ornpetition with' the very tb MobUgas EmnoJJ1y,Rua.
,lQa can-Ia AIQedca I
H
.,":P0If
trads .
.
IOWes~priced V·Ss. Better~:~h ~etter mtlJe .•• worlli mort!
RHItors'
,,,';_,
NOON'
Thewo rid
·v
Many Attractl". Home.s Available
j-~,",,-
.hll. . .lphla
. Electric, ~mpany
Remember, there are only U
. Shopping Da)'8 UNTIL
N.
Stutiehaker.... so
1 "
()pposite 80r0e,' Hall
-
".
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Nearly 100 Winners
In HaHowe'en Parade
Swarthmore League of Women
Twin Events ""Staged
Voters to be held Monday eve'-1
Thursday and
nlng, November 15 .at 8:15 p.m.
at Whittier House 0'1 the SwarthSaturday
more College campus.
Spooks • lind sprites, "haractllrs
Feature speaker of. the evening tram fact and fancy, strung al!>l)g
will be Professor, Lawrence N. in clever, and colorful IUl'8Y 11$'
last Thursday evening's annlUl1
Park. professor of Constitutional community Hallowe'en Parade
Law at the Law School of Temple stalked up Rutgers avenue from
University. Dr. Park is one of the Yale, along Chester road and Into
framers of the New Jersey Co'n- Boruogb Hali Sqcare for seleclion
.
' o f ribbon awardees.
stltution of 1947.
..
.
Sponsored by the Swarthmore
One of the highlights of the Business Association. headed by
evening will be the presentation the Swarthmore College and High
of a humorous skitilJustrating the I,S"hool'Bands. and siruttingly marawkwardness of the' 1873 state shalled by .John .E. Michael' the
constitution which is in use .10- parade was judged by Mr. and
day. The skit. which was QriginaJ- Mrs. Avery Blake. Dr. and Mrs.
ly presented by the Maryland Frank Keenen. Dr. Peter C. Coste,
League of, W9men Voters, has whose selection of' the following
been adapted for presentation by winners .'was announced by L. C.
the local LWV. Mrs. Stephen Hastinll:
Whicher wlll appear as Mrs.
Fancy Dress. Karen Schloesser,
Pennsylvania while Mrs. John Lynn and Don Hartman, flrst;
Hampton will be Mary, her Charlotte Brodhead and Ellen
Mondale, second;' Barbara Snape,
daughter.
Barbara AlJison and Holly Bishop,
Coffee will be served after t\1e third; Lois McLaughlin and Cemeeting., All members of the com- elle d'Angelo. honorable mention.
munlty are invited to attend. Mrs.
Comic. Georgia and Margie DetPhillip Allen will introduce the weiler, Cally MacNair, Barrie'and
speak¢r. 'Mrs. Allen and Mrs. Carl Bettie Bovard. and Sal1y McCawBatus are co-chairmen of the
f1l'St; Nancy Thelan, J.une RoxState
Constitution
committee,
Caroline, Jimmy and Tela
w/lich is In charge of the meet~ Clifford, sec.ond; Eddie Harris,
Charles E. Fischer
their opening
at 34 Walnut
Street,
Morton.
Licensed
and bonded.
Notary•. Phone KIngswood 3-7331.
PERSON4L - Active·woinan. 15
,to 35 dollars a day,in:your spare 'Tile Floori .Plo,stle: Tile
Model'll "'whens
time. Nationally sponsored, proAlterations
gram for·. women. No. colle<>ting,
. - - . .- ,
delivering; canvassing. Liinited
1401 Ridley Ave_
local driving. Age' 25.45: Write
... " 'I
,-- - ". ,~.
"
giving your address' and phone
CHester
2-4759
nu m h7 r to The China Club of
2·5689
AmerIca" ~ox 4, Point Pleasant,
=,p,:;;;en:::n::;.s:::y.:,lv:,:a~w:=a.:.-~-:-:-..,:-_ __
PERSON~--:- ,Bendix. hpme 'I!P_ '==========::===
pllance sel'Vlce. Washl!l'S,·drier~ ,
ironers.· Factory' trallied' 'serncei '.I""~~-=--"""'-::::-"""i:~-"
men. General Bendix. parts~ We
also repair' ABC Whlrlepool and
Kenmore.· 61-SO\\th 'MOrton ave:.'
~~~~;~~~~~:
_
E. .
6{;rtlIlHC Stutlcollker-.lkcHttrd-tNe lIJorlds 4t1tlal$esI
Swarthmore 6-2253
estlml!tes.,Call WAshburn 8.-6lO.7.
PERSONAL - Grace Lewis'Employment Agency>' '. announces
Crystel green .. Two door sedan.
Excellent condition. Extras. $550.
KIngswood 3-8482.
FOR. SALE '-' Mahogany Double
Four_Poster Bedroom Set. E1c:celient condition. Make reasonable offer. SWarth.'llore 6_4294. '.
FOR SALE-Parakeet· Customers
- I have moved to 11 Turner rd.
WaI1ingford Summit., One mile
e'!St, of ~edia just, off Baltimore
PIke. Mrs. James SUva.
"
FOR'SALE '- U]iholstery 'cloth at
. wholesale prices. Thom Seremba. .
Phone Sbaron
, " .',
Seventeen dlfterent· cameraS
for -taking' Kod~chrome • or
black and white pictUres.
Four different motion picture
cameras. Eleven inexpensive
call1era sets plus 0 the r
cameras "s u c h as folding,
stereo, aJ).d reflex. Also projectors and scree~s.
..
PERSONAL - Television, radio
and appliance repairs - prompt
.ervic!,. TV sets repaired, In. the
home. Robert Brooks, SWarlhII'0re 6-3889.
:~:~~t~~~::=~
:FOR,§ALE-'
1950 Chevrol~t.
do hllVe -Ia stock'
•
W.
'1' CONGRESS
CONSTRUCTION
RESIDENTIAL AND
COMMERCIAL
Improvements consist of a, 2 story
:~g,~~~r~~~E~~~
r;_N
"
"How To Achieve Constitutional Revision" will be the topic
of the November meeting of the
usro~ LAYAWAY PLAN
CLASSIFIED ADS
.
Hire·i§·WRY •
'
Jack Prichard
HuwSwarthmore Voted
J
293 Horse power
Equa.actlott double compound
Hydrauiic Power Brakes '
Full-flow body' styling '.
or knee action
(with Bermuda sborts)
r,'
McXealge & Roee H. McKealge. bls brick twin bause 21 x 42 teet.
wlte.
'Sold .. the property ot Edward J.
BAN;D M'ONEY_500.00.
Brennan,
.
Atty: Georg<> W. Tbo~n. Esq.
Atty: Greenwell &, Porter.
, F. A. BNEAR. JR.• 6b_rlll
P. A:. BNEAR; JR.. 6herlll
FOR RENT
•
don't h_e:
But we
mentioned point and place of North twenty-nine. degreea twenty
be8'lnning_
•
minutes thirty seconds West, ·twentyBEING Jmown 88 No. 125 Oak Avenue. five feet to tile ft.rst mentioned. point
and place of beginning. Being
Tmprovements conslst or a 1'h Number Six and bouse number
story brick 8ingle hause 22 x 32 feet.' Madtson' Avenue.
FOR REN'l'-Room; kitchen privIleges for women in teachers
apartment. Call SWarthmore 689q7.
FOR RENT - Apartment. Two
large '. r 0' 0 m s in ColJingdale.
Beautiful1y decorated.' Private
bath 'with stallshawer. . Third
floor. Private" entrance. $55. iI
m 0 nth including hot water.
Adults. 627 McDade :Blvd. ,'.
FOR RENT'- Room and private
bath. Call-SWarthmore 6c2691.
FOR RENT - 224 Park avenue,
Boro. Second' floor; two: bed-
New 1956 Model!
We
LWV Meet Nov. 15
I
~
kitchen and m,!dem bath. '9.5. 'PERSONAL - Wall ,scraping clean cork. Floors and' furniture
Call 8
. to 5, p.m. .SWarlhcovered" Paper taken - away. Free
Guaranteed, Standard' Coal
.
114-0252'
.
~~o:v=e=m=be=r==5~'~1=9:54========~::::::::::::::==::===-~I~H~E~S~W~AR~I~1UK~O~RE~AN~________~________________~__________~p~H!~p~!
Rear .a....I.' Lot-R...r E....a.e.
thlrty-.seven
minutes
twenty
thence extending
Soutb
one seconds
degree
west, 29.15 (eet to 8 point: t.hence
extending South Blxty d~i!rees thlrtynine mlnutes thirty seoond8 West,
passing partly through the party wall
between these premiBe8 and the
I>remiseB adjoining to the Boutheaat.
110 feet to a point an the North-
rooms, living room, dining· room,
, Ser.vfce avo liable to our
customers on all makes of
011 barners
Level payment plan on oil
bills; Automatic' deliveries
of
oil during. the heating
.
.
season
,'-'
504 laIH"... Plk.
Avenue; . thence , along the
Eastern, line of pak -Avenue ex·tend. eaaterly 6lde· '0(' MB.dlBon Avenue;
Ing Northwtt.rdly Pl:fty feet to the thence extending along the same
THOM SElll:MiA
UPHOLSTERING
VAN ALEN BROS.
.-
.
..
nue (40. teet'wlde) 'at Ihe dlstanee of
136:73 feet',meUurecl SOuth twentynino' d.gf.... twenty minutes thIrtY
seconds Baal.· "'oltll1the-, said Blite of,
Madison Avenue, from Its Inte....ctlou·
with the South_rly side of Plrth
Avenue (40' feet wtd,,) I' thence, ex~
tendl'l.g from aal<\, beginning .polnt
North Blxty .. de~ thirty-nine
minute.· tblrtY oeoonl!Jj' l!laat.'·ono
,ISola •. M. the property of Russel G.
Form.rl, of F. C. Bod. " Son.
Fine Watch and
128 Yole Ave.
Clock Repairs
Swarthmore, Po.
Box 48 SWarthmore 6-0740
~,o&
,~~;,~
.E
'.
_
E",IL SPIES
..
-'-'·.·c'='~;'·"·.:tb:-ence
Corapl.t. Stoct of Tubes
for Hora. Repaln
Sp...ingfiel~
Laundromat
..
-
con- hundred t-wenty-:Il\1& teet to,-a pOint;
r~~~[~~!~~~
Television & Radio Service
ROIEIT IROOKs
SW 6-3119-Weft Days
Eve.. .. sonday
.
,
Media Frleads Se:hoal
.. ,Serving all Races. all Creeds
'
Fr!day. Novembj! 19. 196t
9:80 A.M. Eas....... ,'iI"'nd&rd TIme • Three Years through 7th Grade
COnditions: t25J>.Dil' ~h'
~~eck\ at time or· 'sal, I(udleu\othv~
wfse'stated in advertijleraent) balanceMEdIa 6-0984
eni IIno of oak Avenue at Ino dlstance ot one' !hunlli'ed feet SOulbWltLiAM BROOKS
wardly trom tbe SOutheaet comer of
. '
oak Avenue and Proepect Avenue ..Id
Ashee & Rubbish Removed point of beginning being a comer ot
LaWtl8 Mowed, General
land recently conveyed·.to Melvin T.
.B a ~
A~~f:':~~~:, then"" by a line at right
a,
eatd' oak Aveuue and paronon. Pa,
Prospect Avenue extending
236 Barding Ave..
,____________~I·l-tw..rclliy one hundred and lIfty
Sheet Metal Work
5, 1954
November
SwarUmo.. 6-1441
SWarthmore 6-M55
~
~
- - - - - ' - - - - - - - - - PellnsylvAala, described 88 tollows:
BEGINNING at a point on tb~
BEGINNING at a I>olnt In the East. Northea....ly , ' _ of M8dIBil" , li.ve-
Builders
for
-
No. 809 . ' r • JUne,TeI:'!"..d968. ' . .' .
bam Fetherolf. 109 COlumbla Avenue, PIERI PACIAs'
. . ..'
ALL: THAT CERTALI" lot orl>leee of
Bol>t.
Term.
19M
gt.ou,,
the b11lliltnp and. !mil
Swartbmore,
or to the
attorneys for Pennsylvania,
the,-Estate.
·ALL THB" cERTAIN-lot ,Or Piece or provements thereon e~.,.evruNl'B
,
A DAVID II. SPEERS. ESQ.
ground -with· the bulldlnga and . Im- In. the- Borough of Proej>ect l'arlr.. .
DUANB. MORRIS &i HECKBcHER provements, thereon erected, SITUATE COunty of' Delaware" 's.nd' State _of
1611
Wm. W. Rumford Co.
-.
8ALBa
.
BSTATB
.
. ' .,
co CHElUPP'S OPPICB
•
~T HOUSE, ~1A. PA.
Prlday. 'November, 19,' 1964
9:~ A,loL,Eaatem.Standard Time
ESTATE OP RICIDlOND D. PEATH-,
EROLP; alao known ae R.
PEATHEROLP.
Letters Teotamentary'OD"the above I
_to hay, _n ~ to the
PETER 01 NICOLA
..
THE SWARTBMOREAN
'
I - Made - It - Myself, Elizabeth
Leach. Janice and Susanne Carroll, first; Christy Decker, second;
Allen Stamford and Steven Baner_oft, third; Steven Jacob, honorable mention.
Group, Peggy Robinson, Barbara
Stewart. Carol Davis, Marian
Hemenway, Judy and Gail Lincoln
and Ann Stauffer, first; Karen,
Eric and Kristin Peterson, second;
Betsy Bennett, Susan Hayward,
Susan CampbelJ and Barbara McLarin. third;. Parky Smith. Ann
and Jim Gerhart, Connie Diamond
and Dorie Kroon. honorable mention.
Floats, BUnny, Le~nn, Chucker,
SaJly and Ruth Kurthalz and
Charlea:, Jody, Nita, ,Jean, Anne,
and Juanita Paul. first; Sara and
Laura EniOD, Joanne and Carol
Le!!. J oim Espenchade. Susan and
Carol Morgan, Betsy Kaml>. Jody
and Julie Brooks, Mark Good and
Andy MacNair. second; Sarah and
Jeannette Grier and Sharon Bowerman, third; Heide Honnold, Su:.anne Bower. Antonlcal Fairbanks
and Margaret Quist, honorable
mention.
Adult, Philip Swayne (first
prize by popular acclaim.)
The Lions Club and Civil Defense unit assisted with tramc
control and other services incidental to the pat'ade.
Many youngest-bracket paraders
,wllited for the "up-through-third
grade" parade held Saturday
evening Inside the College field
house. The Business Association
also contributed toward this event
which was sponsored by the
Swarthmore Mothers CluTi. 'Tis
said the separately dated events
gave some parade-happy smaJl fry
a double strut while spectators
too made· the most of the two unconllicting 'opportunities not afforded during recent years when
the twosimUar events were staged
simultaneously. Treat bags for all
replaced awards Saturday night.
1954 Spirits Well Behaved
,Either Humcan Hazel's havoc
left worldly damage-doers feeling
mite ,1!DI!.ec .,8"3"'or the wide
actirities
III:~~~ in~unI~
satisfying BalloWe'en
urges this year. For in Swarthmore; .~ in the entire PhIladelphia
area; destruction and inconvenience wrought by mischievous celebrants happily _
to ,bave
been practically non.,exlstant.
Gel Your lUbben'
A shortage of ribbons on TJun.
dRy night iesuJted In ame.~
winners being' set bene
.,
t.O.U. Those who dht
.,.
..
1
""
"
,
"
THE SWARTHMOREAN
Page 10,
NEWS NOTES
Donald F. Pierce, seaman, USN,
.'1>n of Mrs. Hilda E. Pierce of
Harvard avenue Is' serving aboard
the rep~ ship USS Brlareus.
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Fre! of
Shoreham, L.I., were the w ..ekend house guests of Dr. and Mrs.
John R. Bates of North Chester
road, who will entertain at a
supper party on Sunday at their
home in honor of thelr guests and
the 'weekend guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Clark Davis of Wallingford,
Mr. and Mrs. Albert W. Barnhart
of Shoreham, L.I. and Mr. and
Mrs. William Packard of Ridgewood, N.J. Mr. and Mrs. Davis
will entertain at dinner Saturday
night in honor of the six visitors.
Miss Susan Merz of Parkslde,
Mrs. Raymond Yorden of Broo~haven, and Mrs. Frederick W.
Held of Westminster avenue entertalned at I' surprise ~hower. on
October 27, at' Mrs. Held's
home In ho!,or of MIss Betty McDowell ,of Chester who was
married on Saturday.
Mrs. Arlhur Mllinowski of New
York City has been spending a
few days with Mrs..Ralph Litue,
Sr., of Park avenue.
Guild Optician..
Experts in the Making and Fitting
of Spectacles and Eye Glasses
8,27 LANCASTER AVENUE
BRYN MAWR, PA.
'- UPPER DARBY, PA.
6915,LUDLOW STREET
1923 CHESTNUT STREET
PHILADELPHIA 3, PENNA.
"
•
-
About half the cost of
a loaf of bread buys
the average family
a whole day's supply
of Springfield Water
-
SPRINGFIELD WATER
-----
•
Although It's one month away,
volunteers from this area are busy
nOW pla'lning the details of the
Fourth Annual Cerebral Palsy
Telethon on Chanel 6, November
27 and 28, to be held In Convention Hall. Funds gathered into the
television show will begin at 10
o'clock Saturday evening and will
continue until 2 o'clock Sunday
afterJ)OOn. An all-star caat of entertainers and celebrities Is
peeted to appear in thls annual
More than 500 vobinteers from
the Bell Telephone Company of
Pennsylvania will be on-stage, to
accept phone call pledges made to
the telethon. Henry G. Weaver,
Jr., Regional Vice-President lof
the United Cerbral Palsy Assocla, tion, atressed the fact that all donations made to the telethon wlll
be so dlst.rlbuted that they will be
made available to the 10 cal
affiliates in the area where tbey
are pledged.
Volunteers from the area will
also be used in many other behind - the - scenes phases of the
television operation. Special cafl!terias will 1;>e provided In Convention Hall to serve entertainers,
crew members, technicians, and
volunteers, with meals and refreshments while the program is
in progress. Plans also call for
serving 'many of the television
show personnel at their posts
throughout the sixteen hour event.
Relays of messengers who have
volunteered their· services will
also be "sed to communicate between the various telethon centers
while the show is on the air.
SCHWARTZ ON TEAM
-
~·T".'
PHILADELPHIA SUBURBAN WATER COMPANY
Scrvlng 49 MUflle.pol,tiu In Df·lawol!,~, Montgomery and Chester Countws
I
.
'"
'''''?,~1' •._""
.~
Robert Schwartz of 1104 Muhlenberg avenue, is a ,letter man
and stand-out on the Haverlord
College track team whcm wlll
meet Swarthmore CoUege here on
!Nolvenlber Iii.
Schwartz Is a senior at Haverford.
6th GRADE PARENTS
There will be a meeting' of the
mothers and fathers of ,the 6th
grade of Rutgers Avenue School
on Monday evening, NO,vemller 8,
at 8 p.m., in the new All Purpose room. Myrtle McCallin, 6th
grade teacher wlll speak on "What
To and What Not To Expect of
the 6th Grade ChUd." '
The officers for this year are:
Mrs. Neno dePrQphetis, chairman;
Mrs. Wallace W. McCrory,' program 'chairman; Mrs. Sidney J.
Diamond, hospitality chlfirman;
Mrs. L. S. Corbett, secretarytreasurer; and Mrs. Anthony
Anastasia telephone cha~rman ..
•
,
,
,
Hits New High in
Knock·Free Powerl
5, 1954
Volunteers Aid Fourth
Annual C.P. Telethon
OPEl
.& FILTill 9
p • M.
Mr. William Kurtzhaltz of Park lane rturned Wednesday evening
avenue went to Dickinson College from a trip to Europe of· six
"The Chest
is In finan
business
to
c·Indy Fox, daughter of
.. Mr. and In Carlisle last Saturday' to' attend montha. While there, Dr. Good
provide
as adequate
.
clOg as Mrs. K. M. Fox of Yale 'avenue, the 100th anniversary ot the traveled all over central Europe.·
'"
possible for lis member age·
Ib
founding of Phi· Kappa' Sigma
,MCCUII oug h Addresses' and th
.
nCles ce e rated her 6th birthday on fraterility.
'.
:, "
"
us contribute as much as
,Oct. 28 Dinner
possible toward the total
.
October 25, by enlel1ainnlty service '
commu_ Ing a group of her lImall friends
~tharine r .. nnlng, daughter of
MARGE· HURD
M
, eeting
t
h
program. Choices as at a luncheon party.
..-.-----,.' ' . ,
, • , o w at private agencies should
u.u-. and Mrs. Robert T,lmnlng of
Consolidation of two Red ,Feath- do m';'"t be made in relation to
Mrs. William Phillps, the form- It_Drib Chester ~ sang, with the Sandwiches - qasseroles • Salads
..r health services, the ,f~nner changing community needs and in er Miss JuJle RlchardsQn of Park Beayer College'Glee Club recently
SWarflllllore 6-3138
, ' (,lLl'
,_, '
the Ught of work th t ·
av"nue, reeenUy left for EI' ·88·0,' in AUant;lc City;
,,
Commup
SOCiety' Cen- the most Impact on the
a imm"dl.ate
will have Texas with her son Marty to
'. ",-, ty
, Health
"
Dr; Robert Good, Jr., of Forest
Iral velaware" County, and •the futur ~ 0 f community well-being,"
join her husb and wh'
,
0 Is staUoned '
Public ~al_th. Nu.rslng SerVice, he said, statl·ng also that there are at Fort Bliss for four month•.
DelawareCounty, mto the cOm- Btl!1 tremendous resources for
Mr, and Mrs. Robert RlchardIP'·,
mw\ity Nursing' Service, Delaware
philanthropy that are not son have moved from 401 Park
courity, was compared to big being, tapped.
avenue to their new home on Crest
407 'OARTMOUTH AVENUE
business enterprise 'by W. T.'McCommunity Nursing lane.
"
.. ' '"
, " .' '. ":'- Cullough, director of the Agency Service., maintains administrative
BREAKFAST Operations Department of the offices and its E'lltern branch
NEEDLEWORK GUILD
.. ' . . . CLOSED EVERY SUNDAY
Community Chest of Philadelphia' office at 60· South Lansdowne av","
INGATHERING
QI'Ei-f'7 A.i.t: to 7:30 !>.M.
and Vicinity.
nue,
Lansdowne
with
;.
Western
Mo'nday THrough
Saturday
b
h
Tue•.• Nov. _9-10 a.m. '
,
"Two autopomous organizations ranc office in Borough Hall
D -.
.
......:.
voluntarily combined to do a big- Swarthmore. ,'r h e Com";unlty
ExhibU and Tea-2 p.m.
. al y Dinners 90c to $1.85
ger job for slightly 'more money" Chest has allocated $54 000 for Swarthmore Woman's Club
Spec/al C"lIdren:_ PiaHerl
U.
AGRBB-StW6
':0''R-O''.p"" '1···lf',.
nn
'T~e',new
In the front nnk when it
comes to value - a better ,return for your food Jolhu
when you shop, at Aane.
aI
said McCullough who addressed
about 200 professional and lay
persons .attending the dinner on
October 28 that marked estahUshmentof. the new agency ,af tee
Lansdowne Presbyterian Church.
He cited the consolidalion as an
example of how pr,vate enterprise in community welfare can
kIt'
to
see so u IOns
total community
needs 'and give leadership to
develop new services.
A';' '" 'AVOR, SA Y' "A..•..• .."
When you serve Acme Lancaster Brand Rib Roast of Beef, you're
always sure of plenty of Ah·h·h·s and O)"h.h's! It's a masterpiece
_ tender, flavorsome, juicy. Our buyers select only ieally choice,
com.fed young cattle to give best values to Acme customers.
Lancastea Brand, U. S. Gtaded Choice
RIB ROAST pric:l°~~gher
Boneless Rolled 'Pot Roast Plat.
Ib 39c
Fresh Reg. Ground Beef lb 34c : 3 lb. $1.00
Morrell's Ball Sausage
' Ib 39c
Sliced Breakfast Bacon I='....r Braud 8-0. pk. 37c
Skinless Frankfurters Brand
I=caster KpkS
lb . 25c : pkg
lb 45c
C
79
STEAKS
------C
Ib·37
CHICKENS(~..d; )
lb
"In the current Red Feather
and United Fund campaigns each
one of us has an opportunity to
put. his own price tag on community services be i n g 'sold'
through th<;se campaigns, and
, each of us has an obligation to
carry his. fair share of costs for·
s~ch servIces as health. rehabilitabon of the physically handlcapped, care of the mentallY ill, etc.,
just as we do for police and fire
THIS
maintenance of. the new' service
from October 1954 to May 1955
when the current fiscal year ends
and' allocations for the next year
will be made.
~~~~~iii;iiiii;iiiii;iiiii;iiiii;iiiii;iiiii;ii~~~~~~~~~~~~~::~~:~~~~:~~~~~
I
•
Officers elected to serve on· the
board of directors of the new
agency were introduced at the
dinner. They include: Samuel
Evans, Jr., 646 Edmonds avenue
Drexel Hill, president·, Mrs. Carl'
H
. Schmitt. 90 South Rolling road,
Springfield, first vice-president;
Harold Ogram, 533 Riverview
road, . Swarthmore, second vicepresident; Mrs. Harry J. Jai
vice-president; Mrs. Francis Forsythe, 410 Thayer road Swarthmore, recording secret~· Mrs
Laurence M. Ustick, 185' Owe~
avenue. Lansdowne. corresponding secretary, and James L. Holstein, Jr., 127 Madison road, Lansdowne, treasurer.
Lancaster Brand STEWING
Potato Salad
I . . . . 27c
. Sliced Peaches :'01" ,! 25c
,
Long Island
Swiss Cheese-- .. '"19c
Loof Chee~
.... 14c
I
.
FOOD· MARKET
q,,1
"
•
.
I
CAULIFLOWER
•
5'ba~ 45c
APPLES
..
.-.-
!.
.
10-0& .lor
....dJ>
BIU!I Bird Orange Juice
Downy Flake Waflles'
-'
: . -~.' •
I
.
.'
19
~: ~_
. :~..
.
':' .!
1 '.
S,WIOD
.
;::"
. ';'-
.............................
RAISII PIES
RAISIN BRUD
PEC'I RIIG
Reg 23c Supreme Plain or Iced
ARE YOUR AllTIQUES
PROTEClED'l
llew l'temIum ~
,
l
IIICL IR
POW R-
Fusco
You can Insure your antique furniture, lilv.r,
paintlap, tape lui. or
other works of Kt apiDat
practlcall7 all n.a ~
loa or d,mep.. AU. aboat'
our "AU Ri.... Pine ArtII
Polley• .
I
Peter E. Told ,
..4U Linea 0/'''''''333 DartJDoath Ave.
Swarthmore, Pa.
~Warthmore· 6-1833
I}tkal
or
i"'~
,DI.en
Educator Crax .
.
only
'
.
'j
!
2 pkg .25•
r.;
.1:: 'J1
2:::: 2!.
.89
Hudson Table
,;~t 27C
2 ~ ),7,
,
.19
,.
ers' Association are urged to aHe.nd the annual
t:Jf l.'l'l L: .:. .,.,' :'. ';'~_:i
.
.
. .,
meeting on Monday November 15, at 8 0'-
a:.: 114: ~ ~
"
.
;
ATYENTIONI
All Member/i of the Swarthmore Property Own·
:::. 3t
!
!
.i
.~
l
••.'
"
j
,
!
45C
.3
i,
DIN~,ER
•
1~19C
,17':
,
head .35·
,
'WAfFLES
.,..
=39
Pu...... =
.!Jdeal ....,.....itS.di.lIs··
Oats
"
C
Reg 49c MAPLE
!)dmI Salad Dressiag
TO•••O Sow,· ''g.. 1i~.
.:
t
Downyflake 1 Minute
•
Virginia Lee Delicious 45c Value
I
1
,
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 11
Armistice Day
,
•
·2 pkg .29
PUMPKIN
(large can)'
.
Players Club
,4,
,!
Arctic Seal Skinl••• Cod or Large Perch
FISH' FILLETS
.19
,.pkg
.
.~~,...
J
.
,.
Co-op
"'" "r'
WEDNESDAY,
NO~RR 10.
0_'
J:
pq FllEE)
~
• '!"
Mrs.- leu"l's
Woman's 'Club
8,20 P.M.-"StaIa:g 17" ............. ,............... Players Club
8,20 P.M.-"Stalag i 7"
.
.'
CAULIFLOWER
............ "............... Players Club
.
a1
.791b
.
"
Large
California
. -_ ... -. -_ ..
8:00 P.M.-Roy McCorkel ....... '......... ,........' Meeting House
r
1 •. ' . Ib
.
9,00 A.M:-Annusl Ingathering-Needlework Guild
"
.641b
cog'. -.
., , ' , 'J.. ..
~lIESDAY, NOVEMBER: 9
c
•
CARROTS
. .
'
.,"
~!~4
California
MONDAY, NOVEMBER 8
8:?0 P .M.-"Stalag 1i"
4,
TOMATOES
12 Noon to 5:00 P.M.-Chrysanthemum Show .......... Field House
I
,.
. ,'. .
Swarthmore College
only
6 .... tbu 69c
3 pkp of 6 35c
011.0
.:
',,' "
Extra Fancy Cello Paks
.'
1! :00 A.M.-Morning Worship ................... ,... All Churches
.
Your Chnice
10-0z plq'
.
,
SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 7
Big 19c Sale frozen foods
.!)dM,I Brand
Baby Lima Beans
,Mixed 'Vegetables
French ,Green Beans
Grape juice -.
Shredded Potatoes
"
2:45 P.M.-Football Game with Yeadon .: ......... :. Ruigers Field
..~.-'
.
'
LOIN LAMBc'CHOPS
RIB LAMB' CHOPS'
.
For Stew
LAMB (Breast or Neck)
10 A.M. to 9:00 P.M.-Chrysanthemum Show .......... ' Field House
Swarthmore' College
head
NOVEtJ!B~~
lEG OF LAMB
2:01i to 9 P.M.-Chrysanthemum Show .. '.... , .'... , ... ' Field House
Swarthmore College
~.
....... ,
Swift"s Premium····· .., ....
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 5
,"~
, large
'
. WEEKE~.D~f
.
CALENDAR
.
r •
403 DARTMOUTH
AVENUE.. ..
:
" P. , . , _ .
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 6
.
Bastem Stayman
WEEK~S
LlI~CH DIN"'~~
r=::=:===========t
Porterhouse
(lJu, two and cd
•
NEWS NOTES
pr~vate
ElICTE'
LanCaster Brand, U. S. Choice Beef
Sirloin
T-Booe
Page 11
p'
Saturday Till 6 P. M.
POLKS
ACMB.
•
protection ,and public education"
McCullough stated.
'
~
Our Swarthmore Market Now
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~====~~~====~=.lbenefitPerlOnnance.
J. E. LIMEBURNER CO.
-
N~vember
200' Salute Ne'w
nursl"ng Agene'y
THE SWARTHMOREAN
.
.J
CI9C~i.n
..,.::
•
I
~
':
l;r~V
i:
~,~.
i
~
."AP.KINS.(80 per package}
.'}
' ... ~" ••• ,
...-;
<')ffti;
2 pkg .•2~
·.-t·w )'}
Co"opy.~,,~
$WI;Q' p.cn:~TQES
(i 5-o,~ CCJ
-_.'
.CRISCO
•
the .W9,~an's. Club. Ten diredors to be
£.
.
- '
-'
(3-1& Can) .
elected.
.
'
'
.Coupon wprth 10c on each
,
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'.
can
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.
.34
.95
J
~
November
1HE SW ARTHMOREAN
P~
12
,
•
'.
Thetas
to
5, 1954
. cc
•
Sew
SENIOR A~SEMBLY ';
Swim Club Case °
swarlhmore left the field at half
The Thetas will haVe their, BU,
Moves For Decision day sewing at the bome of ~rs.
time leading 20-0.
The 11th and 12th Grade 'Senior
After receiving the kick-oil to Assembly will hold the first d'P'ce
Fin~1 testimony in the Swarth- J. G. Lamb in Rose Valley on
open the second half, the Garnet of the season at the Woman's Club
1D0r~ Swim Club case was heard Tuesday, N.ovembe~ 9..
put a 75 yard drive in motion that
'. .
never, stopped until they reached on Saturday night; November '6., " Frida; morning by Judge He"!'Y
and
hostess
of
the
11th
Host
p"y
dirt.
Again,
it
was
mucll
the
G. SW\llley at the Delaware cou.!!;
Meet Yeadon Today At
same pattern except better block- Grade are Mr. and Mrs. Raymond ty Co~i-t in Media.
Rutgers' .field '
Ing in theUne helped backs Huin- Gemmill, who will be assisted' as
Judge Sweney directed Attor2:45 P.M.
mer, Snyijer and Coleman to chew
c,haperones by Mr. and Mrs. Wil- ney James N. Robertso~. co~l
.
off bigger chuks of, yardage. Kroon
Glen-Nor High School becam~ missed for the second tilne ml,d the liam Pegram, Mrs. David Braun, for protesting residents of seven I
tll.e sixth v:ctim of Swarlhmoe- score stood· at 28-0. At this point, and Mr. Arthur Hoch.
homes near the proposed pool site
High School s 1854 football ag~l_ Several substitutions were made,
Mr. and Mrs. H. Lindley Peel
I
•
Doaors appreciate the
gation with a 26-0 score last.
, mosn,fwhQm played the remain- are host and hostess of the 12th on R1vevlew road. and A. Sidney
Johnson. Jr., counsel for the 450
value of our specialized
day, october 29.
'
d
f th game.'
Grad~ and' will be assisted by Mr. member Swim Club which has
PlkIdi
hoe,t'o.e
.
service. They kDOW~C i.
The Chester
e ~~:' : s t ; Although Glen-Nor was able to and Mrs. 'Cllarles Hummer.
Borough Council's approval of Its
importaDt to have p~e.
have won on1~ two 0
r,
ove the ball inside the Swarthplans, to file briefs by November
six starls prov,ded vllrlous threats :ore 20 on a couple of occasion's,
scrlptions compounded
15. The Court's decision is expectthroughout the game but were the stout Gamet defense which Quaker House Head
prOMptly, and precisely
ne~er able to cross the golden has been an asset all year rose
To Speak' on UoN~ I~e~d~s~OO~n~th;;;;e;;;;re;;;;af;;;;t;;;;er;;;;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~
as diretted. Ask ,....r Docstnpe.
. '
to the challenge and gained posSwarlhmoreans who heard con- II
tor.,He probably wmsug·
swat;thm?re, seeking its SIXth session of the ball in each inPIANO TUNING
win, had difficulty getting started tance. Ed Noyes, .playlng his first llicting views expressed at the regest that you turD to us.
1'1.... and Bebunt Plan..
cent'
Community
United
Nations
as fumbles and intercepti~ns c~t game at offensive left guard, did
and BepaIrIn, BID"" 1\108
them possession several times m a commendable job in the ab- Day forum, will have an oppor_,
CATHERMAN'S
ALBAN PARKER.
the first quarter. It was not until sence of veteran Stu Bowie as did tunity to hear a first-hand acDRUG STORE
Phon. MOdla 6·_
the closing minutes of the first Preston Hollander who was taking count of the current session of the
stanza that tlie Gamet was able over for Carl Thomas who was out United 'Nations on Sunday, Noto get a consistent attack rolJing. with a cold. On several instances, vember 14, at 8 p.m. In the MeetThe eight-three defense employed 1 rt aggressive play by the Gar- ing House.
by Glen-N!,r gave the homesters ::t Une forced many oppDnents
Cornelius Kruse, Director of
s.ome difticulty at the outset. The miscues and fumbles. ,
Quaker House in New York city,
Came~a .. Hobby Shop
accustomed holes were not as big
ed I th will speak on ''The United Naand the backs were not able to
Other boys who· pl~y
n
e
6 Park Ave., Swarthmore
were Scott Piccard, Bob tions Climate - Fair and Warmbreak a way with the JJghtning like game
.
Le Gemmill Dan Jack- er?" Quaker House is maintained
effeCt of previous encounters. The Keller,
e
,.'
first touchdowh was scored from son, George, Garrett, Bob cf:,ng , near tlie United Nations as a. place '=~~~~=~===::====~;;;;:;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,:;;;;;::;::;;:;;;;;;;---
inside the five on 11 Malin to Cole- Andy Jones, Bill Welch,
:rg~ where members of different national delegations can meet In an
man end sweep behind blackers Kroon, John Coleman nd All a
Hollader and Hummer. This 65 Tippett, in, addition a
en atmosphere of good will.
The title of the talk refers to
yard touchdown drive was made up Vaugh ;Who does a ;e~f ~~P::c~
of short jabs by Hummer, Cole- able job at either en or u
. the umjsual 'fact that this year
man and Lewis. For the first time,
This afternoon the Yeadon High for the first time since 1946 the
because of the Glen-Nor defen- School Eagles will bring a ~ery Soviet Union has joined with the
sive alignment, Quarlerback Malin formidable tem;", to RUtgers Field. Western powers, in offering a
empl.oyed the quarterback sneak In their past s,x starts they have joint r!'solution on disarmamen~.
play with effective results. In the met defeat only once, and that was Dr. Kruse will speak fran! hIS
second quarler, Preston HoJland- at the hands of the Springfield personal experience on the proser captured an Indian fumble on C~ugars. Since then, they have pect for lessoi;ring world tension.
the 35 to set the 's(age for Swarth- continued to Improve and h~ve
Sponsors are the local chapters
more's second touchdown. The scored between, 20' and 40 pomts of' the' women's International
team started to roll now and in recent ball games. In the per- Lellgue, the Unj/;ed V{orld :FederCharlie Hummer, capped a four sons .of halfbacks Jac~'Boyd and alists ,and the Peace Committee of
play series' when he bulled over Bob French, they have two of the Swarthmore 'Monthly Meeting.
from the three yard Jlne to put most dangerous scoring tltreats in The public Is invited.
Swarthmore out in front lS-0. Pete the county. They will have to be
Kroon conv~,his second extra stopped if Swarthmor~ is to conDOLMAN TOCONYENTION
point to ma~t, 14.
tinue its victory skem.
~ohn .p, Dolman of Media will
At the end rltthe half Cal ColeGame time is at' 2: 45 p.m.
attend the convention of the Naman faked an end run to the
. tional Association, of Real Estate
right behind fine protection, stopCandy Cupboard Boards in Cleveland, November 8
ped and threw a long aerial to
through l~. The A~ociation is the
left end George Pappas in the far
and Treat
parent organizatiOn of theAmericomer of the end zone. A fine play
can Institute of Real Estate Apby Pappas turned this iilt.o a sC.ore
The owner of tbia car iMpeded early. He
$1.35
as he stole the ball from two
praisers: and Mr. Dolman is a
discovered that his brakes were badly out
enemy defenders. Pete Kroon
member of the Institute's Governof adjustment atId two linings unsafe •••
made .one of his few misses on the
ing
Council.
He
is
also
president
and that a suddeD need to ItOP on • wet
Catherman's
,try for the extra point and
.of the Philad~lphla 'Chapter of the
roadcouldhavekilled~HeTHOUGHT
Institute and one of the youngest
his car would pass the inspection without
a hitch ••• ,and gave thanks for a wile
men ever to, 'hold ..either office .
State inspection law.
DECEMBER 15 ,HAl!t ED .
.
;. " . SAFEDRIYING DAY
.
,
SHOW
VOLUME 26-NUMBER 46
'Stalag 17' Hailed'
As' Good Theatre
Large All-Male Cast Wins
Audience Approval at
PI.ayers Club
The Players Club's pr.oduction
of uStalag 17", which has its final
performances tonight and tomorroW night, is. a steller achievement.
biffic~Jt to cast, easy to ovcr
play, vulnerable to poor timing,
·'Stalag 17" earns for Director
Joseph Vi{. deFurla and his assistant Donald H. Pugh the commendations they are receiving from
theatre goers in the area. The production is well staged, well paced,
nicely interpreted' by a cast of
interes~ing variety, eight of its 19
members in their fir"st roles for
lhe club.
A special recognition of merit
is due a good comedy team, and
what is more rare? Joseph Ferrone and Norman. Snyder (Stash
and Harry) turn in a tremendously effective team performance,
easing the tension of the suspense
with their funny stunts, frequently. They out-Ch'lplin Chaplin'with
their Heil rotters.
Donald Hand's Sefton is subtly
toned, strongly bitter, no "herOics,
thank you, and very well dorie.
He "grows" on one, Sefton. That's
one reason the final curtain Un"c
is so marvelously satisfy'ing,
fraught with suspense as it is.
William N." ConraD, Jr., as Price
does a telling joil, als.o, in an
exacting role.
Walter Ziesmer ,as Hoffman In
charge of the war prison barracks
adds a quiet steadiness which
blends the group. Hans K. Steinfeld's German captain' is cagedlionishly convincing, enough so
that his effect upon American' air
force sergeants as well as his own
(Continued on ,Page 10)
I
t
State
inspection
exposes.
-
danger •••
•
What's wrong
with this picture?
Easy: There's only one telephone in the house, and it's a
long climb from ,the utility room, where she spends so
much time.
Easy, too, to remedy this annoying situation! For ~
a month you can have a second telephone wherever It
wiD save you the most steps •••.kitchen, ~sement, den
or bedroom. Just call the .Telephone C!lmpany Business,
Office and ask about.an extension telephone.
THE BELL TELEP"OME
, COIIPAIIY Of PENIISYLVUIA
.
,
with ti)e
HARRIS & "~O~ ..
'TAILoas
ad ........5·
'.,
• ."
•
t'"
w.
Book Week Open House
, The Swarthmore Public Li.
brary invites the community to
participate In lis observance of
, Children's .Book Week, Novem.
ber 15 tltrough 20.
.Under the slogan ULet's Read,u
'Ihe Library wlJl have on exhihlt
a large number of newly pub."
Iished children's books and,
with Ihe cooperati.on of Bookways, a number of children's
classics, many in recent editions.
On Tuesday night, November
16, at 8 p.m. L1hrarlan Bellina
Hnnter and Mrs. Anne Pennen
of Bookways wlJl discUss chil.
dren's books for adults in the
communily who are all invited
to the Library's open house for
Chndren's Book Week.
LIsIs of books recommended
for young readers of an ages
wiIJ be distributed. These Iisls,
which are compiled for Ihe celebration, which include newer·
lilies as wen as many classics
for home libraries.
The Library's Dew ·books on
exhibit wlJ\ go IJ;lto clrcnlation
on Saturday, November 20.
Show Dog Training
Tonite in H.S. Gym
Lions Sponsor Obedience
Demonstration to Aid
Chester Blind
The Swarthmore Branch of the
Needlcwork Guild held its Inga\)lering at the Woman's Club
on Tuesday, November 9. A grand
total of 3447 garments were
brought in, sorted for the 19 ben-
H.S. GYM
53.50 PER YEAR
,
Receive 3447 Garments
EVENING
McCabe Proposes
New Exchange Plan
Lists Industry-Education
Program as Tool for
Future
ficiaries, admired by club memAn exhibition .of n.ovice dog bers, and packed for delivery by
Thomas B. McCabe, of North
training and techniques in ad- Ie,'enin!:. Dresses for children num- Chester road, president of Scott
vanced obedience performance will ber 'close to 100, many sewn by Paper Company, Monday night
be held in the Swarthmore High Swarthmore seamstresses.
advocated consideration of a busi-
To Tell Clubwomen
Of 'Wicked' Stage
School Gym on Saturday night,
November 13, at 8: 30 p.m. Sponsored by the Swarthmore Lions
Club for the benefit .of the Blind
Fund, the program is being presented through the courtesy of
the Philadelphia Dog Training
Club, of which Edward H.Green,
former Swarthmore resident, is
president.
In addition to the group or class
demonstrations there will be individual performances by dogs in
various stages of training from
beginners through a d van c e d
championship winners. An unusual feature will be the mass
driIJ in which the dDgs execute
maneuvers asa unit under the
direction of training director RusseU H. KlIpple, Havertown.
The Philadelphia Dog Training
Club is one of many similar organizations in the United States
d
d 'c
Pup10ls Net $900 For
NeededSCh00I Items
••
. ;:
.,,
l
"
•
A C
Trinity Fair 18th
,
,
DRIVE'SAFELY 'OMORROW
DON'T flelDPC dan~DO JospecC early
lID this compulsory inspection period.
Pace winter driving with the assurance
that your car has, been State-approve~
for safety. Have your car's "danger
areas' checked_BR.AK1l5-SnillR!NG
_WHEEL ALIGNMENT-MIRRORS
_WINDSHIRIDWIPERS-WINJ)OW
GLASS_HORN-TIRES-IIXHAUST,
MURLEll AND PIPE-and UGH'fS. I
OFFICIAL INSPEcnoN PERIOD
STARTED NOVEMBER 1. INSPECT NOW I ,
.
BE PREPARED FOR
WINTER DRIVING
COM~~~wtALTH
OF' PENNSYLVANIA;
••,arbl••t .1."....
. .Ii L .... eauut .,
I
°
onO"MISIND
. .011&.. . . . . . .-
. ce.alill ••• •
'
•
fl· , ........
..=...., .......~
-=:;
country-wiiidieiiProii~iec~t~.iiiiiiii_iiiiiiiliiiiiiiiii iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii iiiiiiiiiiiiii
ME!'lS
SUIT~ MADE-TO-ORDER
h.,.,. ,••rra
SWARTI.lMORE, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 1954
SATURDAY
ness-education exchange fellowNew officers elected for the ship program to a group .of outnext two years are: Mrs. Joseph standing business leaders and edH .. Waiters, Jr., 2nd vice presi- ucators at the BeUevue Stratford
dent; Mrs. William H. Geltring, Hotel in Philadelphia. Mr. McCabe
secretary: Mrs. Charles E. Lin-I was presented with the Gold
coin, assIstant secretary.
Medal of Merit Award by the
AnYDne who was unable to maire Wharton Scho.ol Alumni SOCiety
her co?tribution, may do So by of the University of Pennsylvania,
contactIng Mrs. A. Sidney John- an annual award for outstanding
son, Jr., president, of North Ches- business leadership and public
ter road.
service.
Mr. McCabe pointed out that
under his proposed program Utal.;.
ented educators would be invited
int.o industry to work and study
at indust,,'s expense, and representatives of business manageSum Earned In Last
ment can be offered the .opportunity to take an active part in cJassWeek's Magazine
room work." The' program for
Sale
the teacher, he said, "should be
•
related to his particular interests
Swarthmore's two elementary and should if p.ossible run for a
school are $900 richer this
~~ period of six months to a year. In
Monologist in Dramatic :~ope/~:ni~ed~~~:~m~n/~~~~: due to the (en-day sale .of maga~ any lesser time he would, unless
Program of Timely
safeguarding of the dogs them- zine subscriptions engaged in by engaged on a specific project, gain
1
third. through sixth grade pupils only a relatively superficial imSkits
se ~es and the elimination of hi h I '
pression rather than the compre.
nUlsance and damage created by w c cased Monday morning·
An afternDon of fun is promised untrained pets. The Club has The pupils join Principal Thomas h~?~Ve understanding I have in
to the members
Club of Swarlhmore Tuesday, No- the Instructions of owners and purchasers of' new subscriptions
"The .program I envi';'on is .not
··'
. ti
just an investment In the Invember 16, at 2 p.m. when Mrs. their d,ogs. J. Richard Sadler, 15 and renewa Is, w h ose coopera on
n the d I h
d it
'bl definite future-it can serve as a
Robert B. Clothl,er, chalrm. an of Rose lane, Springfield, is treas- "
r ve as rna e, POS51 e
Id'
valuable tool for achieving almost
• student elI 'ts t
fa
the drama .departm"
' ,.,n"t". wi,11 pre, _ urer.
,
-, ·te
- eeded'
or ,0 prov
sun- immediate results. I koow' this
dry
b th Ce II'
sent Mrs: KathrYn· M. Borden in
The Blind Fund of the'Swarth'ms n
10 a
a ege
''Lif
th'
S
and Rutgers avenue schools in because, at Scott Paper Company
e upon
e Wlcked tage." more Lions Club is used to help
we are already benefiting from
This talented dramatic actress the blind and aid in sight-saving exce~s of those which can be seI
.
.
I
c,~~~~~t~within the School Dis~ct's an exper mental program of this
and monologIst wdl give several in the area. Part of the proceeds II
sort. On my desk now is a
skits which are sure to prove both of Saturday night's d.onations wl\J
thorough analysis of our comentertaining nad inspirational.
be allocated to the rehabilitation ... :he two sixth grade classes at pany's merchandising research
Mrs. Borden, a resident of of the workshop at the Chester ~I~~ Coliege avenue school provid- program. Prepared by a group of
Philadelphia, is weU koDwn in Branch of the Pennsylvania' As- ~~, the top salesmen. Gloria 'DD'. Harvard faculty members who
women's clubs as wen as in the- sociation For The Blind which >u, .of Margaret Yeatman's room came to live and work with us
atrlcal groups. She is a charter was ,recently damaged by vandals. earned first place with a total of fora number of months, the reCont~mporary Show atlmember of the Germantown T~e- Barton W. Calvert is chairman of $89. Ronald Noyes of ~hI1Ip port, its concluslOns and recomatre Gulld, where she' had leading the Blind Fund Comm,'ttee, and Swayne's
o
78
Id room was second with mendations will rank, I believe,
ommunltv
r t ' tr. roles In "Life with Father," ''The Kendall C. Sacijer is c"airman of $ so.
among the very signiJlcant contrl•
R<>yal Family," "Glass Menag- the Dog Exhibition project
Although it was nip and tuck butions to modern
business
The Community Art Center in erie," and other plays. She is ,
between the rooms of the tWD methods.
Wallingford is presenting an ex- drama chairman of the Philadel- Anne W
Wood' t
winning pupils for the winning
''To make the exchange com°
a
classroDm of the day on several plete, I propose that educators arhibition of contemporary design in 'phia New Century Club and a
wood, clay, m~tal and fibre. The member of the Matinee Musical,
occasions, and other rooms ran range for more frequent visits of
exl,tibition which opens Thursday two clubs which make frequent
, , '
t.otals and won the daily men in business to lecture in the
evep.ing, November 11, for private use of her dramatic and musical
The Woman's AuXiliary of the
treats anI other days, the classroom. I know few executives
viewing to members of the Art talent.
Trinity Church in Swartqmore
accounting (worked out on a who have not taken great pride
Center and their guests, with Mrs.
Some of Mrs. Borden's skits
basis to give fair ad- in training young men. Many
Gerald P. Kynett 'as hostess, wl\1 will include songs of "The Gay announces Anne Wertsner Wood, vantage to classes with smaller men from industry have accepted
be open to the public for three Nineties" (in costume) an~ .an noted' lectUrer, author, and horti- enroliments) resulted In Mr. Invitations to speak at the
daYS-Friday, November 12, and unusual sketch on ThanksglV~ng culturist in a demonstration of Swa)"11e's and Miss Yeatman's Wharton ,School and to lead semSaturday November 13 fr.om 1 and its meaning to us. Her WIde her popular decorative ideas for rooms being highest for the entire inars at colleges and universities
tD 9 p.m: and on Sunda; Novem- repertoire and great versatility aI- holiday celebrations at the annual sales period ~nd within but sev- all .over the country.
her 14, from ,1 to 6 p.m. Among ways assure a program of varied H~liday Fail', Thursday,' Novem:~
cents of each .other. TherefDre
"A free inlerchange between
the 21 craftsmen who WiJl be ex- appeal. Those who have heard
a' tie was declared and all stu- schools and business creates a
hibiting will be 10 who are na- Kathryn Borden agree that her ber 18, at 10: SQ. a. m. in the dents in each of thos~ rooms, who meeting ground where each can
lionaUy , koown. The guest ex- intimate style of entertainment, Cleaves Room of the Trinity were responsible for any sales, inspect, at close range, the ideas
hibitors will include June Groff timely touches, and warm and Church.
will be provided with as much ice and techolques of the other; where
of Philadelphia, Ellen Seigel of gracious person'!lity endear her to
Mrs. Wood Is the auth.or of the
as they can eat, through the each can make his contrjbution
New York City and Robert Turner ller audiences and prove her ex- practical, well-illustrated book courtesy of the publishing com- to the essential task of bringing
of Alfred N:YO '.
ceptional ability.
abo u t Christmas decoration, pany whose sales plan was used.
science into distribution through
Miss ~roir'h
h d nine oneHostesses for. the day will be: ''Make Your Own Merry Christa better understanding of human
man shows at ~e ~ Alliance, Mrs. B. C. Bren, Miss !Wa Cres- mas." She is also the anthor of
SCHE
behavior; where each can join
and numbers among her clients son, Mrs. James P. IlaughertyA' Jthr., ''Flower ShOw Guide."
.
DULE BAZAAR
with the other in the training of
Bruce D Smith
t e ·
men and women who have before
IIattie Carne"'e, Claire potter, an d tMrs
She was graduated from the Ii Mrs.H A. H. Sheldon, Mrs, Wil- them the challenge of leadership
~.
t
a bl'e Mrs' Norm'an Kr'ase and
adnd Tina Lesser. Miss Seigel, who Mea Roy S Latimer will pour.
School of Horticulture, Ambler, amM C· Brown and Mrs. J. H. in an economy, the potentialities
oes custom weavm'g, has had
rs.·
and also studied at Pennsylvania ,,_,.__ c onecby are members of a at which transcend anything
'
we
three
of
her
dranerles
used
in
State
and
Cornell
University.
comnilttee
working
for
the
'
.
..
7th
Grade
Luncheon
'
.
'
llave
heretofore
en.visloned."
the U. No Building and one in the
Following her studies she traveled
of the British Empire
new law center, at Harvard UniMothers of the 7th grade will abroad where she g..thered valuto be given at the Belle.,
versily.
'
have a progressive luncheon· oh able material for her taJks. .
Stratford on November 22.
JuNIOR ASSEMBLIES
16, at 12: 30
Anne Wertsner Wood has conThIs is an aimual affair and this
The 8th and 10th Grades will
. Mt-. Turner, who has also ex- Tuesday, November
. c.ourse will be
hoid tIielr second " ' - - of the
biblted at the Art AJU'ance, just p.m The mam
tributed. to The Ladies' Horne
it wi11 take on a. Charles
............
b.
•
. ' th
homes of Mrs. G '
"
season at, the Woman's Club on
~on
first
prize
at
the
18th
Na'served
m
e
'
Journal,
House
and
Garden,
The
atmosphere.
.
'rhe
booths
I!onal Ceramic ExhIbition, spon- Palmer pUgrim, Mrs. Thomas Home. Garden, Popular Gardenbe called after Dicken's Saturday, November .13•
SOr'"
b
McCabe
and
Mrs.
Frederick
r
W
'
D
and many 0 f'th e I a dies a t Dr. and Mrs. Ned B. Williams
""Fin y the, "'-cuse
Museum
oman s
BY, and many
Of
~"...
art
and collee will be ng,
, a r e host and hostess ot the 8th
e Arts Wharlo Esherick Tolles. Dess
other magazines and newspapers.
the booths will be dressed
Of Pa 11,'
n
served. in the homes of Mrs. The Country Gentleman will feacostumes of that period.
Grade and will be assisted ..
...... 0
internatiOnally known
'-_ Mrs. Clarence
chaperones by Mr. and Mrs. How-"'?t,or and woodworker, . will Francis Cham~., Willi
Mc lure decorations made' by Mrs.
of the members includ- ard ,Sipler and Mr. and Mrs. C.
~t a PBnel. on furniture and Franck and Mrs. ~~ has-Wood in its December issue.
Mrs. Sheldon visited England Corben Shute..
A;r detan.
.
Clarin. Mrs.. Robertand h:r com:
She is a member 'Of the Garden
past summer and ;brourbt
Host and hostess of the 10th
lVal,,~!I those afBllated with the pitality cha:"~ of the ar- .Club. of America and the NatIoDa1suitable arIIcles for sale.
Gralle are Mr. and MIs. H. WR~'-dArt Center who ,wil mlttee a r e e o u n c l l of
A1l ~~t'
th',,.e ~=~:'I Us Jacboo who
be ass~d
It, Wil1 be
E\sbree, lrang~~~·is ~ done by the for
~';~~,
v....
]!I
IBllfIIIIl !larjorie
'claT.
Cat~,.....
'.~
c
,
,"
Lli.E,,::Y
THE SWARTHMOIAN
OBEDIENCE
TOYS
One 24-hour period when,
tltroughout the nation, there will
be no highway, a,ccide~ts, fatlllities, or. injuries Is the goal of
, Sare'Driving'Day,wAlCh:has been
, .: schedmed ,for. December IS" by the
President's Action Committee for
Traffic Safety. To .prep,are. motorists and pedestrians 'for the
test day, an, int~nsivll 'educational
campaign will be,'~aunched' .on
November 15, using all available
channels for distributing Information in the United States.
. 'The objective of Safe Driving
DiIy, to be called 8-D Day, is to
provide a graphic demonstration
that highway accidents can be
virtually eliminated if all drivers
and pedestrians do their pan to
make the nation's 'thorOughfares
safe.
,",
'
Each governor' has been asked
to designate a state S-D Day director, and in Pennsylvania, Otto
F. Messner, chairman of the Governor's ifighway Safety Advisory
Committee will ~t the statemide program. All-. mayors and
county officials will take pari In
\he program, and assign local Svember 15 designating December
15 as S-D Day!o. •. '
. In addition, civic and other organizations WIll be asked to
develop SPBClal prOgrams In lI:/le
oJ
O'OG
Garnet Wins Sixth
Straight Victory
•
~ r ',',
of ... itlf~ .,.~
,SWarthmore.~,5Q", ..
HIGH G~DE CLEANING,
PRESSING and REPAIR..
~ r"
,,
"
:
~.'"
,
J
.
wruu:.
,.::
,
,
"
1II81eneuk.
,
1
j
•
I
I'; ,,
~
THE SW'AR1'R
November 12, 1954
THE SWARTHMOREAN
PB8e 2
bMng presented by Denison Uni- nounced the 'engagement ot their
versity, Granvl\le, Ohio.' Kenneth daughter, Miss Susan Mm, to
Mr. Andrew Lee March, son of
is a junior at Denison.
Mr. and Mrs. John F. Spencer . Mr. and Mrs .. Harlan M. Chap- Dr. and Mrs. Harold March of
of Yale avenue are entertaining at man and daughter, Judy, of Bos- swarthmore, and Packer Corners,
a . neighborhood tea on Sunday, ton, Mass., are visiting Mrs. Brattleboro, Vt.
BEAUTY SALON
Miss Marx was graduated "in
November 14.
Chapman's parents, Mr. and Mrs.
IT'S CARING THAT SAVES THI WEARING
Lt. J. G. and Mrs. Charles Roy Latimer of Cornell ar enue June from SwartJunore College.
Mr.
March
is
also
a
graduate
of
Keenen have been visiting Lt. this week.
SwartJunore College, and has ,re9 South Chester Road
Keenen's parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Mrs. Lloyd E. Kauffman of turned this fall from a year spent
Frank G. Keenen of Harvard ave- Dartmouth avenue is spending
'CillI SWarthmore 6-0476
lo Austria on a Fulbright Fellownue for a few days. Lt. Keenen several days visiting friends in
ship. He is now. awaiting his
has recently been transferred Bridgewater and Harrisonburg,
from the USS Henry W. Tucker to Va. '
military
'service,
afterwill
which
the
_
date
of the
wedding
be anthe Navy Recruiting Station and
Mrs. Vaughn K. Foster of Har- nounced.
Office of Naval Officer ProcUllJvard avenue and her daughter,
ment in Boston.
Mrs. Boyd Harris, and Mr. Harris
Colonel and Mrs. G. Hurst Paul
Col. Robert H, Douglas of Fort
and son, Pete. were guests of
PRESTONE
ZEREX
Chester announce the engageBenning, Georgia, spent a recent Mrs. Foster's daughter, Elizabeth
•
week end with his parents, Mr. Foster, at the annual Homecoming ment of their daughter, Miss
AUTO REPAIRS
and Mrs. James B. Douglas at Day of the University of Mary- Patricia Paul, to Mr. Reinhard F.
their home on North Chester road. land. Elizabeth is a senior at the Jaeger of Springfield, Mo.
ROBERT J. ATZ. Owner
Miss Paul is noW Associate ProMrs. Samuel Rarig arid her University and· is majoring in
fessor of Music at Drury College,
three children of Glens Falls, N.Y. Elementary Education.
.
:;pringfield,
Mo. A graduate of
are visiting Mrs. Rarig's parents,
Allto Lite Batteries
Dr. and Mrs. Willter N. Moir of
Wheel Balancing
Mr. and Mrs. Stanley L. MacMil- South Chester road will entertain Eastman School of Music, RochesDartmollnth and Lafayette Avenl/es
lan of Vassar avenue for two as their week-end guests Mrs. ter, N.Y., she studied abroad in
SW 6-0440
Paris,
Munich
and
Italy,
and
has
weeks.
Cora Moir and her two daughters,
Naval Aviation Cadet John R. Nancy and Martha, of Cape May given many violin· concerts in
middlewestern cities.
Hertel, son of Mr. and Mrs. Paul Court House, N.J.
Mr. Jaeger was formerly of
R. Hertel of Rutledge graduated
Dr. and Mrs. James L. J ezl and
on October 29 from the U.S. Naval family of Cornell avenue attended MUIuch, Germany, and is in busiSchool, Pre-Flight, Pensacola, Fla. the 'wedding of Mr. R. Richard ness in Spdngfield, Mo.
Hertel is now assigned to the U. S. Bannister in Charleston, W. Va.,
The wedding date. is set for
Naval Auxiliary Air Station, last week-end. Mr. Bannister, November 24 in Springfield.
Whiting Field, Milton, Fla., where who is Mrs. Jezl's brother, marhe is engaged in primary flight ried the former Helen Ann Lowe
WED TOD4Y
Dog
training.
of Charleston.
Mrs. Robert B. Jarratt, daughter
Mrs. Walter R. Shoemaker of
Mr. and Mrs: Clarence G.
of Mr. and Mrs. Wyndham RanRiverview road bas recently re- Myers of Dick~son avenue had as
Sponsored by
dolph Bean of Elwyn Farm,
turned from a visit with her their week-end
guests, Mrs.
staunton, Va., will be m~rried on
daughter, Mrs. William H. Dietz Myer's parents, Dr. and Mrs. Friday, November 12, in the
Swarthmore Lions Club
of Daytona, Fla.
Lyman J. Briggs 'of, Washington, chapel of Westminister PresbyMrs. W. S. Satterthwaite of D.C. Mrs. Briggs. will be at the
terian Church, Wilmington, to Mr.
North Chester Road returned on Myers home until today. Also Louis Burton Dennett of WilmingBenefit Blind Fund
Tuesday from a visit with her visiting Mr. and Mrs. Myers was ton. The .immediate families will
daughter, Mrs. John S. Tennant, their daughter-in-law, Mrs. Peter
be present.
SWARTHMORE HIGH SCHOOL GYMNASIUM
III, of Newport, R.I.
B. Myers of MilJlogton, N.J. '
After a short wedding trip, Mr.
Mr. and Mrs. Vir. Edward MedMrs. Francois Matthes, 10rmerand Mrs. Dennett will be at home
ly of Washington, D.C., and re- ford of South chester ro~d, Mr.
at 316 North Princeton avenue,
cenUy of Bethlehem, wJ11 be the and Mrs. C. W!1dey Lukens of
guest of Mrs. George R. Mans- Strath Haven avenue, and Mr. SwartJunore.
field of Park avenue for three and Mrs. Irvin R. MacElwee of
BIRTH
days this week.
Mt.Holyoke place drove to New
Donation. 50 cents
Mr. and Mrs. David Mercer Haven today to attend the YaleMr. and Mrs. Russell Gaul of
and daughters, Barbara Anne and Princeton football game. Donald Secane are receiving congratulaUah, ot, .Hill School, Pbttstown, Mac:E1wee Is an end on the
. sperit Sunday at the nome of Mr. Princeton team, and Ed Medford tions
upon the
birth ofWillson
a son, thetr
first chlld,
Lawrenc~
born \
Mer,cer's parents Dr. and Mrs.
. attends Yale University,
op Monday, N~yember 8, at Tay ..
'L. Mercer <;if Ogden avenue.
Mrs. Ross H. Freer, daughter ior Hospital, weighing seven
Mr. and Mrs. Edwin H. Mar- of Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur O. James
pounds, nine ounces.
shall of Forest lane entertained of Park avenue, entered PresbyThe baby's paternal grandas their house guest, Mrs. Mar- terian Hospital on WedQesday,
mother
is Mrs. John J. Gaul of
shall's cousin, Mr. Herbert C. November 3, for an erqergency
Harper of Charlottesville, Va. appendectomy. She is reported to Philadelphia; his maternal grandMr. Harper is a June graduate be doing nicely and Is expected to mother Mrs. Florence Green BroomaJl of South Chester road; and
of the University of Virginia Law return home In about 10 days.
Movies - Gifts - Dolls
School and is at present employed
Mr. and Mrs. R. K. Pillsbury his great grandparents Mr. and
Small Fry Shop - Apron's - Food Fair
in Philadelphia.
and their four children of Ox- Mrs. Howard B. Green of the
,
same
address.
Mr. and Mrs. Alfred P. Man- ford, Maryland, have moved into
gels have moved from their home th$ new home at 210 Rutgers
Lecture by
on Forest lane to a new home avenue.
MRS.
JJLOYD
E.
KAUFFMAN
on Brookhaven road in WallingMr. and Mrs. James L. Malone
Anne Wertsner Wood
313.Dartmouth Avenue
ford.
of Dartmouth avenue entertained
Swartl~more 6-2080
Greta Richardson, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Paul Johnson,
"HOLIDAY DECORATIONS"
SUBSCRIPTIONS
Mr. and Mrs. Robert W. Richard- Quaker workers in Jordon, and
FOR ALL
Admission. $2.00
son of 6 Crest lane, i'ecently ap- Mr. Elias Tamari of Beirut, who
MAGAZINES
Thurs•• Nov. 18. at 10:30 'A.M.
peared in the Young People's is a student here, on Sunday
•
Order Now for Christmas
Theatre Group presentation of afternoon.
Pa.y In January
TRINITY CHURCH
"Alice in Wonderland" at Western
Mrs. William' Allen Prouty of
College in Oxford, Ohio. Miss Hudson FaUs, N.Y., is visiting her
Chester Road and College Avenlle
Richardson played the part of the parents, Mr. and Mrs. A. H.
Mock Turtle in the Children's Marsh of .Columbia avenue for the
classic. About 4,000 children had week.
Swarthmore. Pa.
the opportunity to see the play.
Mr. and Mrs. C. Brinton MedGreta is a junior at Western Col- ford have recently returned from
AIR CONDITIONED
lege and has app~ared in several a wedding trip to England of a
Friday & Saturday
month. They are' noW living on
college plays.
Dan" miss Cary Gront in .. Is
Miss Nancy Logan of Walling- Sylvan avenue in Rutledge which
It is with' pleasure thbt we announce
qreatest comedy httll
ford is serving on the committee will be their residence for a few
"BACHELOR & THE
in charge of a Wilson College months.
BOBBY·SOXER"
Party for prospective students to
Dr. E. L. Mercer of Ogden avewith Myna Loy & ShIrley Te...ple
a further' addition to our staff of pharmacists
be held at the Lansdowne Pres- nue is progressing' nicely after ·a · 8ki kiddie, mow Sot.',· P.M. 'Tobor.
byterian Church on November 11. recent illness.
'
n. Gr.a", ... ntee'o.Icol IftOIIster
•
· that cOllld do ai_it a.ythl.g pI.sKenneth Wright, son of Mr.
•
cartoons. comedy &. last c'apt~
ENGAGEMENTS
and Mrs. LeRoy F. Wright of
Capt. A",.rlca serial
.
Kenyon avenue, is a member of
Mr. : and Mrs. Simon K. Man<
the .cast of "Stalag 17," currently of New Orleans, La., have an- SAT. NIGIIT. ONl.Y-RA11IRES. 6+10
Personals
The B:=!~
~~~iiii~~iiii~~iiii~~~iiii~iiii~~~ii~~~~
WINTERIZE NOW
Russell's Service
DOG OBEDIENCE EXHIBITION
Philadelphia
T..-aining Club
Saturday. Noveniber 13. 8:30 P.M.
I~~!~;;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
HO,LIDAY'
FAIR
.
November 17.18
COlLEGE THEATRE
MR. JOHN- MUNDELL
SuJidoy & Monday
Daughters of the
British Empire
IAZAAtl
.Jean SfmlltOns
THE
'PLAnlS ·l:Lua
BelleY,", Straiford
.....y....... 22
"""..li... - 12:30
T•• - 3 to Sp....
OF
:SW~lTHMo'.
Sltt16'l1
Go.rinet -Gifts
Alluring Antiq~e.
Interestlng Items
Pa....ing
Free Looking
... Gotwalt
"THE EGYPTIAN"
" .......... ..u.r b . - t to
scnen I. CJ••lIMIsCop4t
Joseph W. deFuria
-
stand ready to serve you
.. Tliesday I: ·WeclfteSdoy
"NOfMIN& TO LOSE"
'DIrector
· .1tItI.. do ..... _ _ 10
tIorills
oib_
"ANNA""R".·'
111M "
(IN rteHNICOLOtI
lIedw ~ .. H .... ••
...... fde,r
Our five pharmacists, now more than ever,
•. ~ec""col ...
....1..11.1 bI'sIo' ..........' ... .ill .... of tttose WI 10_ c ....... ...
'pte"'"
It's Worth a Visit
vtctor Mature
d ........
of
.
...
,,,,',,'1IfJIY
b ...n........teS , " " Ie ...,-
with professional cpurtesy and 'efficiency
Michaelis
CQlle9~ Phar.macYI
Inc.
,
.
ac.ron ..........11
....,..'
, on the _"er in' Swarthmore
Mon.day, November' 8
..
.SaturClay, .November 13
..
..
.
~.'
.:
...
SW~857
METHOD!ST NOTES
home of Mr. and Mrs. John H.
TRINITY "OTES
.The Young Adult Builders Club Derickson, '539 Westminster aveThere will be a celebratjon' of .
Wl!~ hold a Square Dance in the nue, on Tuesday at 8: 30 p.m. Mrs. the Holy Communion at 8 O'clock
. P~8L1SHED EVERY ftIDAY AT SWARTIIIIORE,PA.
SOCIal
Hall, tonight at 8 p. m. John C. Kulp will be the leader. Sunday mornlog. Children lo the
PETER E.' TOLD, MARJORIE TOLD, PUBLISHERS
The
Caller
will be Earl S. SheckThe Ladies' Bible Class will third grade. and up will meet for'
Phone SWarthmore 6-0900
ler, Jr. The dance wiIJ be held meet at 12:30 on Wednesday; Church S,OOool at 9: 30; and at 11
,
PETER .E. TOLD, Editor
frof1l 8 to 11 p. m.
. .
Seoul Troop 2 will meet at 7 o'clock those in the second grade
Rosalie Peirsol Marjorie Told Ellen S. Simon Sally Alden
Sunday School classes for all p,m.; and at 8 p.m. the final mem- and down will meet. At 11 o'clock
ages begin at 9: 45 a.m. on SUnday. zership instruction class under the there will be" service of Morning
Entered as Second Class Matter, January 24 1929 at the P •
There is a new Builders Class for direction of Dr. Garold W. Prayer and Litany. The CanterOmce at Swarthmqre,' Pa., under the Act ~f M~rch 3, 18~~:
young adults.
Thumm, chairman of New Mem- bury Club will meet at 6: 30 p.m.,
DEADLINE-WEDNESDAY NOON
At the 11 a.m. Worship, Rev. ber Assimilation for the Commis- and the Young People's FellowJohn C. Kulp, pastor, will use as sion on Membership and Evan- ship at 7:30 p,m.
SWARTHMORE, PENNA., November 12, 1954'---~
his sermon subject, "Why Men gelism wilJ meet. The theme of
The ushers for Sunday will'be
Want Christ." There wiIJ be two the evening will be "Local as follows: R. T. Bates, G. W.
PRESBYTERIAN NOTES
of faith and fun . The Young nurseries for children under the Church Opportunities for Spir- Cochran. Wm. Freegard, J. H.
Sunday, November 14, will be Adults will have as guest speaker. supervision of Mrs. Henry I. itual Growth and Service." The Furlong, J. W. Jones, J. N. Nutt,
Dedication Sunday a time for all Dr. Charles Anderson who will Hoot and a selected staff. The evening will conclude with a J. S: Thompson, and C. M. Waterbury. Cari Hally is scheduled to
members to attend church and be speak on "Calvin, Zwjngle, Knox Junio~ Church program is under Coffee Hour at the Parsonage.
the
supervision
of
Mrs.
Alton
serve
as acolyte at 8 o'clock, and
part of the service at which all -Heroes of the Faith." The Bible
Smith.
FRIENDS
M5ETING
NOTES
Ted
Carey
and Richard Turner at
Pledge Cards will be collected and Study Group of the Young Adults
Ushers for the morning service
On Sunday morning at 9:45, 11. During the 11 o'clock service
a specia! service will be held at w~lJ meet at 6, before supper,
wi1~
be
Charles
Grier,
head
usher,
.Henry
Cadbury will deliver the Kathryn Bennett and Jane Hay
both the 9:30 and 11 o'clock serv- With Mr. Schott in charge.
aSSisted
by
George
Shubert,
Edsecond
of
a series of four lec\ures will be in charge of the nursery.
ice for this particular purpose., The Session will meet for a regward L. Alston, William Collen- on the Gospels. The subject of
The Boys' Choir will rehearse
Mr. Bishop will use as her sermon i ular monthly meeting on Tuesday
berg, John Corke and Charles this Sunday's Forum will be the on Monday and Wednesday at 4
topic at both services, "Healing ~vening, November 16, at 8 p.m.
Htlmmer, Jr. Helen McClaren and Gospel of Matthew. This will be p.m. and again on .Thursday at
For Our Suffering." The Sacra- 1n the Women's Association Room. Ron Sutton of Swarthmore Col- held in the lecture room of Martin 7: 30. The Girls' Choir Rehearsal
ment of Ba'ptism will be adminisOn Wednesday November 17 lege will be greeting at the door. Laboratory.
will be held on Monday at 5
tered at the 11 o'clock service the following Cir~les of the Wom~
Rudolph H. Hodge, the new asFirst Day School will be held o'clock.
only.
en's Association will meet:
sistant minister in charge of YOQ-th at 9: 45 in the Meeting House un..
Professor Murray Stedman will
The Senior High Fellowship, the
·At 10 a.m.
work, will be welcomed at the til, further notice.
speak to the Men's Club at their
Junior H I g h Fellowship and
Circle 9, Mrs. Edward Medford morning worship. Mr. Hqdge is
On Thursday afternoon from 4 dinner meeting, which will be
Young Adults will all meet Sun- chairman, at the home of Mrs: a native of Rawleigh, S. C., and to 5 p.m" there will be a choir held at 6:30 p,m. Monday. Mr.
day evening at 6:30 for supper Frank R. Markley, 125 Guernsey comes ~s an excellent qualified rehearsal in the Meeting House Stedman has returned· from a year
~ France working with UNESCO.
together, and. then will break up road. The program will be a book senior student of Crozer Semin- for 5th, 6th, nad 7th graders.
into their respective groups for review.
ary with wide experience in CHRISTIAN SCIENCE NOTES He is in the Department of Polityouth work.
ical Science at Swarthmore ColAt 10:30 a.m.
different programs. The Senior
At
5:
30
p.m.
on
Sunday
the
The
spiritual
basis
for
healthful,
lege.
Circle I, Mrs. Irvin R. MacHigh will have an evening of recElwee,
chairman, at the home of Wesley Fellowship supper meet- happy, abundant living will be
A service of Evening Prayer
reation and fun. The Junior High
Mrs. John R. Bates, 649 North, ing for Methodist students and dealt with at Christian Science will be held on Tuesday at 5:30
Fellowship will have a choir reChester road. Mrs. Walter Sch- other students without a church services Sunday, when the Les- p.m. and again on Friday at the
hearsal and follow wiih a program
midt, Mrs. ~orben Shute, co-host- home in Swarthmore, and college son-Sermon is e'ntitled "Mortals same bour.
• The regular mid-week celebra·
esses. Devotions: Mrs. H. E. Wells. age youth of th~ .church will be and Immortals."
'CHURCH SERVICES
Mrs. S. Milton Bryant will review held in the social hall. The dlsKeynoting the Lesson-Sermon is tion of the Holy Communion will
"Man and God in the City."
cussion will be on "Questions the Golden Text from J~hn (3:6): be held Wednesday at 7: 15 a.m.
PR:ESBYTERIAN CHURCH
Circle 2, Mrs. David Bingham, Chri~tian Students Ask." "
"That which is born of the flesh is
The Holiday Fair will be held
Joseph P.' Bishop, Minister
John Schott, Associate Minister chairman, at the home of Mrs.
'The Methodist Youth Fellow- flesh; and that which is born of from 2 to 9 .p.m. Wednesday and
Sunday,NovemlNlr 14
James B. Douglas, 600 North ship will meet at 7 p.m. at the the Spirit is spirit."
on Thursday from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.
9:30-10:45-11:00 A.M. - Church
Chester road. Program wiJI be church.
Schoo!.
in Pakistan."
On Monday, at 8 p.m. the third
9:30 and 11 A.M.-·Mr. Bishoo "Today
.
Fellowship
Instruction Class for
will preach. Sermon topic:
.
C~rcle
3,
Mrs.
J.
V.
S.
Bishop:
prospective
members
will be held
. "Heallog for Our Suffering."
chal~man,
at
the
home
of
Mrs.
at
the
church.
The
theme
for dls9:30 A.M.-Men's Bible Class and
DaVId
McCahan,
607
Strath
Haven
cussion
wiJI
be
"The
Origio
and
Wom~n's Bible Class.
6:30 P.M.-Young Adults Group. avenue. ,Co-hostess: Mrs. Alvin Organization of the Methodist
down to the' smallest de6:30 P.M.-Senior High Fellow- Carney. Devotions: Mrs. C. L. Church;' and wilJ be illustrated
ship.
tail has made our service.
6:30 P.M.--Junior High Fellow- Minor. The program will be at 1. on the screen with sound film
It
wilJ
be
a
review
by
Mrs.
Robert
strip
"Early
American
Methodship.
renowned for 76 years.
P. Moore of "Under Three Flags." ism."
,METHODIST CHURCH
On Tuesday at 8 p.m. the Choir
Circle 6, MI:s. J. R. Hoover, Jr.,
JOHN C. KULP, B.D., M.A.,
AssQCiation
will meet at the home
Mlolsterchairman, at the home of Mrs.
of
George
Bradfield,
Rose Valley
EDWARD THORNTON, A.B.,
Stuart Graves, 2 Woodward road.
AssiStant MInIster
road,
WaJlingford.
Moylan. Co-hostess: Mrs. J. Roy
DI••CTO•• O. PIINIUU
The Cottage Prayer Meeting for
MRS. RUTH G. NICELY,
Carroll,' Jr. Mrs. George Warren
Organist-Director of MUsic
1.82.0 CHESTNUT STRIiET
will speak on Metropolitan Mis- adults will meet on Tuesday, 8
Sunday, November 14
at
the
home
of
Mrs.
Julla
p.m.,
OUVER H. lAIR, rov.d..
MArY A. BAlR, Prooldont
sions at 1.
'
Behenna, 11 Princeton avenue.
9:45 A.M.-Church School
11:00 A.M.-The Rev. John C.
Circle 10, Mrs. Birney K. Morse, The leader will be Carl Behenna.
Telephone R16-1581
Kulp will preach. Sermon topic: chairman, at the home of· Mrs.
The Cottage Prayer meeting tor
"Why Men Want Christ."
•
7:00 P.M.-Young People's Fel- Ernest Isberg, 200 South Chester young adults will meet at the
lowship will me.et.
road. Co - hostess: Mrs. R. R.
TRINITY CHURCH
Wagstaff. The program will be a
H. Lawrence Whittemore, Rector Study of India.
.
Circle 11, Mrs. Frederick Pat. Sunday, November 14:
man, chairman, will meet in the
• 8:00 A.M.-Holy Communion.
Women's Association Room. Co ..
9;30 A.M.-Church' School (3rd
grade and up.)
Hostesses: Mrs. Samuel Dodd and
11:00 A.M.-Morning Prayer and Mrs. May Chute. Mrs. Theodore D.
Litany.,
Stevenson will do devotions. The
11:00 A.M.-Church School (2nd 'program will be given by Mrs.
gI:ade and down.
'
6: 30 P.M.-Canterbury Club.
Frederick Child on National Mis7,30 P.M.-Young Peop!e's Fel- sions .
lowship.
Circle 12, Mrs. Russell Smith,
Tnesday, November 16
chairman, at the home of Mrs.
5:30 P.M.-.Evening Prayer.
Leonard C. Ashton, 409 Elm aveWednesda.y. November 17
nue. Co-hostess: Mrs. C. W. Olmes.
7:15 A.M.-Holy Communion.
Devotions: Mrs. George SchobingFrIday, November 19
er. Mrs. William B. Pugh, Sr., will
5:30 P.M.-Even.!.ng ~Pray:er.
speak on the World Council of
THE RELIGIOUS SOCIETY
Churches at Evanston.
OF FRIENDS
All circle members are asked to
Sunday. November 14
.
Id
I
t ck'ngs
9:45 ,A.M.-Adult Forum will bring theu 0
ny on SOl
meet ip Martin Laboratory.
for' the Women's Association pro9:45 A.M.-First Day School lo ject.
the Meetlog. House.
.
At 8:00 p.m.
11:00 A.M.-·Meeting for WorshiP·
Circle 5, Mrs. Luther Conant,
All are welcome to .attend.
h in th
7:00 PIM.~~h.'School Fellow- chaimlan, at the chure
e
ship will ",eetat ,the home of Women's Association Room. Mrs.
Richard Coles, 517 Walnut lal\e. Donald N. Twaddell, is in charge
8:00 P.M.-Cornelius Kruse WIll of the program which wiJI be a
speak in the Meeting House. AU talk on the work. III the Central
are cordlally loVited.
North Broad Street Mission by
Monday, November 15
I
.
Mrs. Barton Leeelt. Cire e memAll day sewing for ·A., F. S. C.
Wednesday, November 11
bers will make Thanksgiving
All day sewing for A.F.S.C.
favors for the Golden Age Group
. Thunday, .November 18
10f the Mission.
4:00 P.M.-Chotr Rehea~l ~~
On ThUrSday, eve.nlog, No.vem J
5th, ~th, and 7th gra~es III
ber 17, the Committee to work
Meeting House.
with Displaced Pel'J'Oos will meet
FIRST CHURCH OF
at the home ot Mr.' ~d . Mrs,
CHRIST, SCIENTIST
J h Schott 15 Benjamin' weSt
SWARTHMORE
0 n
.'
\ '
Park Avenue below Harvard
avenue, at 8 p.rn.
Sunday, Nonmber 14
' .
11:00 A. M.-Sunday School.
He.'.
1\:00 A.M.-·The LeIIIlon-SerlDon,
How
Se'..e.
1IIIJI'e'
)'011
Wi1J be'~I'taJs' ,and' ImPURIFICATION OF
mortals.'
Wednesday eVlilnlog meelinl THOUGHT BRINGS HEALING
F.USCO 'MOTOR' .COMPANY
each week, 8 ·P.M. Reading room
CIIesfer
alld
fairview
6-3681
WI' ,"OlCI S • ." ..... ",it;
open dalll( except Sunday 12 1ft 5
.·,.": .. !.'".... r~.:._.;.. ;,.
.
'~ .•.. ':.,
... -<~p" "_'.1..~ ~' •. '
.•• - . • -,.-~'. ' •. - , ' - • • • •-., •.P. M:. WM1ieldiay "e;& ;I"p 'I to
THE SWARTHMOREAN
1
I
-r~~~~~~'·~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-~·~-~-~·,i
EXPERT MANAGEMENT
•
THE OLIVER H. BAIR CO.
{
:
!
-
'Bt;1fD,(/ /1J55
STU,OEDAKER -1:0
••
1
I
,
V-B
Now in direct competition
with t"e very lowest priced V-Ss.
World's greatest v-a valuel
See the sensational new President V-8s, too:••
··and-the big new Studebaker Champion!
ct.,."..
Stodeb~r.,. so mllCll' ktter ;"mIe•• ~1IitJ1 III
.
i ..Ch .'
p..... . ,- ..
!:SOP....
and.1
to 1:30
.
•
._ .... _ " " ; , ; . . •.."0'
,
'.
. . . ... ' . '"
uhn
ttru:k I ~
·sWal·'.wOre
'{
j
I
r
,
Page 4-
Bridge Club Winners
Playing in the north and south
positions at a meeting of the Crum
Creek Bridge Club on November
9, Mrs. Wayne Randall and Mrs .
W. R. 'Shoemaker won first place
with Mrs. Katharine H. Brownell
and Mrs. William Craemer taking
second. Sltling east and west, tlie
winners were Mrs. Irwin MacElwee and Mrs. A. D. Anderson,
with Mrs. George E. Siloway and
Mrs. A. Lee Clifton placing secd
Ion .
THEATRE PHARMACY
" THEATRE SQUARE
* * *
CALL FOR and DELIVERY' SERVICE
Jim, Betty Anne, and Mary Lou
McCorkel of Cornell avenue will
accompany Iheir rarents,' Mr. and
Mrs. Roy McCorkel when they
leave for India via TWA airlines
on November 26.
Ample FREE Parking
SWarthmore 6-3154
iSSSiS'S %%S$$=$$$$% '%SS$S%SSS$$S%SiSSSSSSSSS4>
,
'.
friend" O,.n House
CP GROUP TO MEET
Sept. Term, 1954
~ THE CERTAIN lot or piece at
ground with the bulldlngs and improvements thereon erected. SITUATE
in the Borough ot Clifton Heights.
county at Delaware and 'State' of
Pennsylvania. descrIbed as follo,WS:
BEGINNING at a point In the East-
..
•
.',.
•
In ten days. Other conditions on day
of sale.
No. 309
FIERI PACJAB
ern Une of Oak Avenue at the distance of One hundred feet Southwardly from the_ Southeast corner or
Oak Avenue and PrOfipect Avenue said
point of beginning being a. comer of
land recently conveyed to Melvln T.
Ackerman: thence by a line at right
angles to said Oak Avenue and para11el with Prospect Avenue extendlng
Eastwardly One hundred and .. flfty
feet to a point In Une of land conveyed. to Harvey Prend,ervllle; thence
by a line at rIght angles to the last
m-entioned Une extending Southwardly Bnd parallel with Oak Avenue Fltty
feet to a point: thence by a Une at
rIght angles to the last mentioned
Une extending Westwardly One hundred and fifty feet to the Eastern line
of Oak Avenue: thence along the
Eastern Une ot Oak Avehue extend..
Ing NorthWl\rdly Fifty feet., to the
first mentioned point and place of
beginning.
.
BEING known a.s No. 126 Oak Avenue.
Improvements consist of a 11k
story brick single house 22 x 32 feet.
Sola as t.he propertY. of Russel O.
MeKealge & Rose M. MeKealge. his
wife.
••
MEANS COMfORT I
FRIENDLY CIRCLE
The regular monthly meeting· The Friendly Open House 1met
of the Friendly Circle will be·held on 'Monday afternoon at 2. p.m.
at the home of Mrs. E. P. Yerkes, al Ihe Swarthmore Presbyterian
.19 South Princeton avenue on Church. There were 31 members
Thursday, November 18, at 2 p.~. present.
Co-hostesses will be Mrs: Elliot
Alfred P. Kitchen of Havertown
Wells and Miss Edith Bunting. .
showed cOlored slides of his re- _.. cent trip through Norway and
SHERIFF SALES
Sweden. The hospitality commltof REAL ESTATE
tee from the church served tea.
co~:.~To'i!, PA.
The next meeting of the FrlendPrld..y. November 19. 1954
Iy Open House will take. pIace on
9:30 A.M. Eastern standard Time
November 22, at which time a
Conditions: ,250.00 cash or certilled girl scout. troop from· Springfield
check at time of sale (unltu otherwise stated In advertisement) balance will take part in the program.
DOESN'TI
",.
•
.,
..
c
c
There will be a meeting of the
Young Adults Group of United
Cerebral Palsy on Monday, N 0vember 15, at 8 p.m. in McCahan
Hall of the Swarthmore Presbyterian Church. Slides will be
shown by Elise Remont, who will
be ·a guest at this meeting, and
Cornelius Alwine.
"I saw it in The Swarthmorean."
======::=::==::===::=2:':::
GARDEN ofMEM0 RLE S
West Laurel Hill Cemetery
Telford Section
A memorial-type garden. Landscaped for over-all beautification,
engineered. results. Wide choice of
location. Surprisingly low cost. A
sound investment in advance of
need.
.IVyridge 3-1122
Belmont Ave_ above City line
Dala-Cynwyd
BAND MONEY-$500.00.
Atty: Greenwell 8& porter.
P. A. SNEAR. JR.• Sheriff
COMMUI'£ PRR8£I'I'ER BY FAR I
No worms -
early-bird Christmas shoppers
SETTER because for frequency and convenience it's the finest anywhere_
More trains, clean traina, fast trains . . • to and from all stations
between Philadelpbia- Media.;. where growth and service go togetherI
BETTER because it's better for you-saves your energy, Saves your car,
saves you tune, saves you money.
No doubt about it-a ·PRR commutation ticket is your best into-city
travel buy/
•
See How.liltle It CDsI. 10 Commute PRR I
Goad every day-except during
Type of Tlckel
ruth commuting houri.
rAKE "HE 'RAIII
Mor1oIl
scarfs
jewelry
bags
-t< .64
3.65
3,85
13.IS
Unrestricted US(I MOfithly
IU'
&75
1390
15.40
9.25
2"·Trlp Three Months
1'0 "OWN I·
PENNSYLVANIA
, .
1~~
sweaters -
RAILROAD
THE CAMERA & HOBBY SHOP
.
.
FINEST CONSTRUCTION AND DESIGN
LOCATED IN THE .HEART OF SWARTHMORE
THREE
MINUTES
.
. FROM TRAIN
Before depositing your Treasure Chest ticket •. obtain yQur additional FREE chance on a new
1955 Cherolet to be awarded locally to a lucky person DEPOSITING their National Treasure
MAXIMUM CONVENIENCE
•
Information available in 'office of
BAIRD and BIRD (opposite Borough Hall)
SEE
.
MRS. GEORGE CORBEil
RUl1Isey Chevrolet·
.
SWarthmore
6-6130
,
i
Office Hours:
Theatre 'Square
IF YOU HAVE NOT RECEIVED YOUR TREASURE CHEST
TICKET. COME
AND SEE US TO 'oBTAIN ONE. TODAY OR
TOMORROW.
.
.
. OCTOBER 12 AND 13.
..
.
"Mark"
To Borough Coffer ~7ec;r~~s~:~p7ny~:e~~h~el~~ le~e;e:e~~n~h~f ~o:;~~s ~~IJfO~; ~:~~~i~~;:SSth~f ~~eerte~~~~\~!
SIXTY MODERN AIR LIGHT APARTMENTS
1955 Chevrolet to Be Awarded Locally
Page 5
Lily Dumont,
and
.
V/oJllnsohn, violinist, will appear
:
porary basis of the increase It Is given by Henry J. Cadbury, Emer_ many more specific details with
in a program of the. classical
Borough COultl:i1, taking ac~ estimated the Dartmouth inc;
itus Professor of Divinity at Har- respect to various episodes in
period, Sunday at 8: 15 p.m. in cow;'t of Hurricane Hazel at its together with nine lights o~:s:; va~d University on Sunday, No- Jesus' ilfe. It also contains one
Clothier
Memorial
Hall. at session Monday evening, learned for the Swarthmore Gardens ~e vember 14, at 9:45 a.m. Spon- of the most moving accounts of
~warthmore ColJege. The Wil- that October's big blo~ has al- ~elo~ment will raise local stree; sored by the Committee oil Min- the. crucifixion.
)jam 'J. Cooper Foundation and reads, cost th~ Borough $1856 in lIghting outlay by $278. The tem- istry and Counsel of thO' 'Friends
IN CITY SHOW
the Swarthmore College Music overtime. for ItS regular employ- porary increase which was turned Meeting, this lecture will be given
The Community Art Center of
Department sponsor the concert. ees and In extra help needed to down would have cost another $15 in the Martin leclure room on the
Wallingford
is participating in
Mme. Dumont, a native of Ber- remove Irees and branches down- ~r so.
ma~n fI,,?r of Ihe college building
the
Art
Exhibition
of the Regional
lin, gave her first concert at the ed In t~e storm. The work is still . Charles B. Howland, chairman which hes directly between the
age of 10 before an audience of not fimshed completely.
of the Citizens Safely Committee football field and the old Hall Council. of Community Art Cenlers to be held at the Fidelily800. Receiving her e~rly training
Council expressed its utm t gave a preliminary report of gymnasium.
Philadelphia
Trust Company on
under Leonid Kreutzer and Georg gratitude to Horace Reeves I as I hazards studied and Council ap-] Dr. Cadbury will speak on
Monday,
November
14, through
Bertram, she has since appeared builder,. who contributed f~eeOC:f proved the committee's plan to UM~tthew." and requests his audFriday. November 19, from 9 a.m.
throughout Ge~any, Italy, and charge, .a generator and man- have the Keystone Automobile i<:nce to read the book }>rior to
France, as recdalist and soloist power to operate it for I
d
Club check on several local haz- hiS talk. Last Sunday he dis- to 4 p.m. It is open to Ihe public ..
Robert Wood and Marjorie
with orchestras. directed by Blech, folJowing the storm in or;:r t;';.;~ ards and make Iraffic counts.
cussed "Mark," which he said was
Gemmill wiII exhibit paintings.
Rosenstock, Stem.berg, Abendroth, Borough HaII and police and fire
A lel~er from George Ewing of the oldest book in the New Testaand other internationalIy-known de~art,:"ent functions might be Columbia avenue set 'forth the ment, and from· which Matthew
conductors.
mamtamed dUring the interruption ~roposed off-street parking area iarniidiiii.iLiiuiiiklie~b;;;o;;r~ri!i0w~ed~~h~e~a~vl~'I~y~i~n~'(.i'~'i·'~·~!t~i~niit~h~e~s~w~a~r~th~m~o~re~a~n~
...
In this country she has ap- of regular electric power.
~: front of Ihe ~inns apartment
';, .,:
peared frequently on the radio
Council accepted Ihe $120 b'd . us: as a potenlial hazard. Counand has made recording. for the of A. Wayne MostelIer for a ba~- ~! discussed the matter with Mr.
Concert Hall Society. She has tery lighting unit to supply two mn~ who .was present at the
Some Tips On The Stock Market
made successful concert appear- hall lights and a light in the meetm.g and It W?S agreed to place
ances at Town Hall, New York police station for use during a a slr81ght curbllOe.and abandon
as soloist with the Buffalo Phil~ short term current failure Th the f."rmer plan of lOdentation for
American Can - opened easy for a change.
.
0 h'
.
.
e parkmg area.
harmDnlC
rc estra,_ In Boston publtc safety committee was authUnited Underwear - creeping I!P.
and other eastern cities. Mme. orized 10 purchase a 3000 watt pr~ leiter ~rom the Swa~thmore
Dumont has recently been ap- generator to furnish power for
perty Owners Assoclahon reDehydrated Siscuit - Poor risk, stock has been
pointed to the Faculty of the light, heating and police radio io ~ue~~e~:e~ectors on trees along
watered
Longy School in Cambridge, Mass. have on hand. for emergency of v~~d and e~:r r?ad between HarWolfe Wolfinsohn, born in longer duration .. Cost of the gen- matter I
rv~ew avenues; :r.he
Amalgamated Girdle - Inflation has taxed this.
Cape Town, South Africa, grad- erator is not to exceed $700
of I,.a on~Twhlt~, th~ POSSlblhty
ua ted from th R
I A
.
P acmg
ru Signs at the
M ..
e oya
cademy of
Council also ordered, at a cost south end of the underpass and
A USIC. I: London where he is an of $286, an iron ladder to the similar aids to traffic direction at
Some Tips On The Local Stock Market
s:rocm e and Fellow..
roo! of the ColIege power house the north end, will be discussed
e has performed With the which houses tbe new air horn for with the Stale Highway De arlLe,:ox Quartet and Ihe Stradi- fire alarms. A platform around ment.
.
p
It, wise person shops early
~anus Quartet and has appeared Ihe horn is included in the re
In Eur~peJ .Canada, ?-nd thraugh- ition. Fire Chief .John 'Rumsey re- 1.....--·
...
out Ihe Umted States.
quested permission to test the A BIble Is th best gift
A knowing person shops locally
. In 1939 ·the London Stradivar- air horn at 6 o'clock eve"" eve- One ce", glv. ~t ChrIstmas tIme.
(Save transportation expense
IUS Quartet, of which Mr. Wolfln- ning.
Bible Gift Center
Every shop in Swarthmore is bulging with
~hn w;s flrs~ vi~linist, came to
Robert Hopkins and AI Carney
106 E. 9th Street
.
NEW & INTERESTING items for Christmas
t: rvar
UmverSity .1Ulder a of the Business Association reCHester 3-2396
ree-year plan to Include a quested increased lighting in the
;eekly . course
the history of business section during the pre- I~============~
e strlOg quartet and concerts cehristmas season.· Counoil decided II
for the student body. Mr. Wolfin- to have the wattage stepped up
MARGE HURD
6 PARK AVENUE
sohn remained in Cambridge on fOllr lights in that area, and on
~he.re he is now head of the I two in front of the Dartmouth Sandwiches - Casseroles - Salads
SWARTHMORE, PA.
vlOhn dep~ent· at the Longy avenue apartment house just conSW 6-4191
School and professor at the Col- structed by ArthUr Binns as well
SWarthmore 6-3138
fri. 9 to 8:30
lege of Music of Boston Univ.
two new street lights
15 South Chester Road
Federal TalC
Chest ticket with
writing their versions.
beautifulswec;lters
Free Spe,cial 'Prize
South Chester Road
CADBURY TO LECTURE
OPENING SOON
·.68
Roslrided Use Monltlly
.PI"..
challis bed jackets
Swzrlhmln
. Unlimited Us. Weekly
Wolf~
at the Dartmouth site. The buslness section request was refused
Announcement
'flannel night gowns
",lpellilkel ",t pel IieUI
1.Day Round.Trip Thrift Jlcke'
~I~st,
IHazel's Visit, Costly
(only six weeks away)
\
SAVE on 1-c1ay trip. 10 Philadelphia!
Buy PRR'. round-trip THRIFT TICKET,
violiD-Piano
•Duo,
In Clothier
Sunday
______~____~________~____~~
m
but the
Choicest plums for
smER because it's the quickest, cheapest, most comfortable wayl
A matter of minutes, measured in pennies per ride!
N~~~~~~~---.~;;.~~~~~~~~TH:E~SW==AR:THM~~O~R~~~~
2 P.M. to 5 P.M. Weekdays
•
Ncwember' 12, 1954
mE
Page 6
\:-.:s,. o!po!'s:~~ t~~~~th~~:
ties who have spent extended
periods of time abl'oad will be
Mothers Club Plan
about llfe on the' contiQuiz Program Thursday Club on Thursday, NoveIl)ber .18, quizzed
nent. The program is open to the
Learning how people live in at 8: 15 in the American Leg,,>.n public.
Europe will be featured In a new Room of -Borough Hall. AuthonA special highlillht of the evening will be the refreshments,
carrying out ..the Eutopean theme.
•
Mrs. Edward Cornellus Is in
charge of the refreshments with
Mrs. Roland Coit assisting.
00
Appearing on the quiz show
will be Dr. Kimberly Roberts,
for 011 the Springfield Water
•
M~ician Delights
head of th.e d!!'partment of mod- and Mrs. Paul Zecher .
ern languages; Cedar er"s! College; Henry Hllrnick, Instructor
Springfield·
at Haverford CoUege who recehtly
. .
from a year's study at
Laundromat
the Sorbonne on a Fulbright
scholarship; and .Mrs. Allred
Lot-ll.............
Boyd. The press will be represented by Mrs. Daniel crohnson
;============:::
Club Auelience
ENJOY: IT WITH US
The joint meeting ot the Woman's Club of Swarthmore and the
Swarthmore Branch of the Needlework Guild held at the club house
November 9 featured the ingathering of Needlework Guild art!cles. Mrs. F ra nk G. K eenen, .cIU b
president, introduced Mrs. A. Sidney Johnson, Jr., presldent of the
Guild. Mrs. Johnson announced
.•
now has over 1000
that the Guild
Make your reservatIons ·now
. for tlte entlM famIly
members 'fInd that about 3400 articles had been brought in which
will be distributed to nineteen
Dinner served 1:00 P.M. to 7:30 P.M,
No reservations after 7:00 P.M.
beneficiaries.
'
Mrs. Francis H. Forsythe, pro ..
gram chairman of the Woman's
..... 'a.kI.,
Only a dime a day.
for the overoge fomily's
THANKSGIVING-with all the Trimmings
$500 MONTHLY
drinking: cooking, cleonlng,
loundry, bothroom
~ SPRINGfiELD ~~~
PHILADELPHIA SUBURBAN WATER
Serving 49 MunICipalities
In
Deraw~t{~.
,Montgomery
COMPAN~,
and Chester Counties
~~.
StartinG salary for 2 executive·type
salesmen to ,.prllent lor,. Eastern
flnandal corporation. No troyel. Sal.,
IxP,rtencI and ob1lify desir.d, .sfa~
It'hed ...stdlnf. 25-40 years old. mortied, capable of
Includ. brl.f ,enonal hlltory, aU
repltes canfld.nial. Our sallsmen have
b ••n . Informed of this ad. Box A. L.
SW 6-0680
ATTENTI'ON!
•
403
ERTY OWNERS' ASSOCIATION WILL BE E(ECT-
11. 1954
NOVEMBER 12th, AT 8 O'CLOCK, IN THE WOM-
Swift's Premium
AN'S CLUB. ALL MEMBERS ARE URGED TO AT-
'RIB ROAST
..
.-
TEND.
(whole)
'SMOKEDH'AMS
•
deep impression on her audience.
Extra Fancy Cello -Poks
?
TOM'ATOES
Do You Know • • ••
Kruse· \'0 $peak
Sunday on U.N.
Large California
head
'ICEBERG 'lEi'l!U,CE
PREVENTION SERVICEDoes save time and inconvenience.
In the opinion ot one veteran
19
c
worKer for better international
understanding, there are slgns of
a less frigid atmosphere between
Russia and the Western powers
In the current session of the
United Nations Assembly. This
is the forecast that Cornellus
Kruse will make when he speaks
on "The United Nations C\inJate
-Fair and Warmer?" In· the
Swarthmore Friends Meeting
I
Fancy Winesop
GOOD VISION-
APPLES
Does your windshield wiper wipe clean?
C4-Ib. Plastic Sag}
EXHAUST SYSTEMRemember, you drive with windows closed; carbon mOIToxide fumes from leaky exhaust can be dangerous.
JU:ICY ORANGES (5-Ib Plastic Sag)
TIRES and WHEEL ALIGNMENT-
Co-op Six ~tar' .
Indian River
I. .
ANTI-FREEZE
Just putting in Anti.Freeze is not enough; coolillCJ systems
should be checked.
Co-op Evaporoted
McCormick
•
TEA BAGS (48's)
plus
ARE YOU ONE OF THE 3 .PERCENT WHO
State Inspection Started Novemller FJrst
4 for 49
c
MILK
WINTER LUBRICATlON- .
Don't make your car work against stiff oil and grease.
Co-op
•
16
FREE
APPlE ·SAUCE (303 can)
RITZ CRACKERS
!
(l-Ib pkgJ
Norris Jumbo Sweet
PEAS.
.-
Yale Ave. & S. Chester Rd.
,
Giant
.Here's why over 60,000 cusfomers in Suburban
Philadelphia prefer fhis Superior fuel
Size
POST· .SUGAR CRISP.
.
'
-
OFFERS YOU·
THE MOST
BENEFITS
DEPENDABLE, QUIET-Your modern automatic gas house heating system is
completely dependable and carefree ••• quiet,
too. Can even be installed in Uring areas
within the home.
.
I
FULLY AUTOMATIC-yes, gu house
heating is/!llly a,:,tbmatic. Set your thermo.
stat for the w~';'di you want, . then forget
il. No tinkering, no worrying. Gu takes
care of itselfl
.
NO FUEL ORDERING-A gu furnace
orders its own fuel. And only as it is needed.
There's nothing for you to remember,
nothing to forgel.
I
I
I
1
I
I
1
FUEL DELIVERY -No icy roads or heavy
snows can delay the delivery of your dependable gas fuel. High noon or midnight, there's
a steady supply when it's needed. You can
rest assured of even, comfonable, effortless
warmth whe~ you rely on automatic gas heat.
NO FUEL STORAGE-When you heat
with modern gas fuel, no storage. space is
required. You have valuable basement space
for recreation, or other useful purposes.
CLEANLINESS-No soot or greasy vapors
with automatic gu heal. Walls, draperies,
wOQdwork and furniture stay dean lODger.
-I
I
I
I
I
I
INSTALLATION COSTS-The cost
,of equipment and its installation for gu
house heating is lower than the cost of
. comparable automatic. heating equipment
using other fuels .
OPERATING COSTS-Thethousandl
of people who change to gas house heating
each year expect to pay something more for
the many exclusive benefits gu offers. Yet,
its cost is favorable when compared with ,III
of the costs of any other automatic heating.
NO HIDDEN COSTS-There are no
"hidden costs" with gas heating I No costly
service conuact needed. There is no electric
power COSt for burner operation. Gas heating equipment has fewer moving pans to
wear out or fail than any other type of automatic heating equipmenl. This means less
wear •.. longer life and less maintenance
cost. D.epreciation is less!
OVER-ALL COSTS-Taking all th·ehid.
den extras of other types of automatic' heating into consideration, gas heating is
. economIcal ••• compares favorably with lUIy
automatic heating. That's ....hythe numberof
SuburbanPhilade1phla homes heated with
gas supplied by Philadelphia mectric Company is four times that of five years ago.
When Buying ,. N,w Hlme /n,i,',n AII" ••tio6AS HI,t
Hold Investiture
Brownie Troop No. 441 wiIl hold
their Investiture Service on Wed-
\
SWarthmore 6-1250
S9~
Cornelius Kruse has carried out
a bellef that the best way to improve international relations is by
personal acquaintance with people
of other countries. While he was
a graduate student at Yale, he
joined the American Friends
Service Committee in 1918 to
help victims of the First World
War in: France.
At present he is leading the
Quaker team at the United Nations. All who are interested are
invited· to hear his first-hand account of the sesslon that is still
going on In New York.
2nd Grade Moffters
There will be a meeting of the
mothers of MisS Hagy's 2nd grade
class of Rutgers A'{enue School on
ThursdaY,. November 18, at 3:30
in Miss Hagy's classroom.
.
Nabisco
&tAm
House, Sunday, November 14, at
8 p.m.
89c lb
COFFEE
. To sto"p on wintry roads you must have traction.
HAS TAKEN CARE OF HIS CAR?
.
:~5'
HEAT YOUR HOME WITH
of an artist. That Mrs. MacBride
doing this was evident to all. Not
only was her playing an inspiration but her heart warming personality and rare understanding
of both music and people made a
Chester Rose
ROGER RUSSEll ~
WHY YOU SHOULD
musip and the me~age in the
heart of the composer.
To lose one's sight in adult life
entails a great adjustment in ordinary living, but a ,far greater adjustment in continuing the career
bas been- extremely successful in
Florist
s
sense the intangible beauty of the
c
'S9
, lb
Diluzio and Sons
.
provisations on the telephone
numbers of Mrs. KeeneD, Mrs.
Johnson, and Mrs. Forsythe furnished a very clever innovation.
The pianist was outstanding in
interpretation of the composers
and very fluent in her technique.
But she gave far more than a
wonderful performance of great
compositions. She carried her'audience with her and made them
DARTMOUTH AVENUE
WEEKEND OF NOVEMBER
ED AT THE ANNUAL MEETING ON MONDAY,
on~
a favorite of the artist. Her im-
FOOD MARKET
TEN DIRECTORS OF THE SWARTHMORE PROP-
~
Estelle Mayer
Artist."
Mrs. MacBride gave a program
of great variety, including a Mozart pastorale, Schumann's "Auf:"
schwung,tI Rachmaninoff's "Pre. lude in G· Minor," which she caUed a tone picture in light and
shade, and Liszt's "Liebestraum,"
-
Pqe 7
~
from the Standpoint of the Blind
Walter E. Parrott, Manager
SWARTBMO~
LWY to Meet at ~rlnlty
LOST OYSTER ..
A change in meetinll place has
The name of Marjorie Gabriel
PICTURE FRAMING
been schedu~ed for the November of 55 Forest avenue was omitted
=
me e Ii n g of the Swarthmor> fr?m the list of costume prizePORTRAIT STUDIO ..§_
League of Women Voters which wmners taking part In the HalPHOTOGRAPHIC
..
will be held Monday evening at l~we'en Parade on Thursday eve.
8:15 at Trinity Church. Feature nmg, October 28. Marjorie, dressed
SUPPliES
Formerly
speaker will be Prof, L8.wrence N. as.
of the Oysters, won first
§
Park, professor of Constitutional !'r1ze m the Comic Group depictCAR N S
the
Walrus
and
the
Carpen=
Law' at the Law School of Tem- mg
t
State Ie MOllroe Sts.
§
650 Baltimore Pike
pie University, Who will discuss er, which also Included Georgia
51
S I field DIe
P
e
"How to Achieve Constitutional and Margie Detweiler, Cally MacMedia
!iii
prswngart'"m' ore ••
0 a.
Revision."
Nair, Barrie and Bettie Bovard
6-2176
Open 51
__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _~.:an::d~S~a~ll~y~M~CC~aw~le::y::.._ _ _ _-'.!~~~~~~~~~FrI~
~IE~v~e~a~~~op.. , A.... to ""'"
6 , ....
.,llUllllUlUllIIlllHlUlinIUIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIHllUlUlnllllllllli
MacBride in HMusic and Poetry
INN
S TR AT H HAVEN
Swarfhmorean.
Club,· presented
mE
nesday, 'November 18, at 3:30 in
the All-Putl>ose rooin at Rutgers
Avenue SchooL Invitations have
been .issued- to all parents.
The members of Trpop 441
are: Pat Baird, Julie Enterline,
Flavia Fox, Lynn Hartman, Maria
Hornelt Marian Kapp, Joatl Moir,
S\!S8Il :Park, Beth Purnell, Bettina
Steele, Sandra Taft, Sara I.ynne
Pace, Nancy Starlazzi, and Betty
.J'ayt,e Roth. The leaders of the
troop are Mrs. Ralph S. Park,
Mrs. Walter Taft, and Mr& Frank
starrett.
BUDGET YOUR HEATING COSTThousa\1d. of Philadelphia Electric Company CUItOmen use our
simple Budget Plan. This Plan·C05tSyou nothing atn,yet apreadsyour
gas payments ·eveoly over a lO-monU, period. Visit or phone ony P.IL
office to arrange easy budgeting of ,.", gas house healing payments. .
Get the lull story ... the""" story. Get in teuch with your plu.her, healing confractor,
or any "·Our'.""" ~ Then , ••'. choose A~TOMATIC GAS HOUSE HEATING.
Phllacl.lphla Eleclrlc COlnpany
l'.ge8
ORPHAN'S COURT OF
DELAWARE COUNTY
PENN8YL\r ANIA
NoUce of FlU"r wid Audit of
AC,counts.
Notice Is hereby gh'en
to heirs.
J.ecatees, creditors and aJi persons 111tJeft8ted that accounts In the (ollow-
In&' estates have been flied In tlte
Omce of the Reglst,pr of Wills and
Clerk of Orphan's Court as the «-'Sse
may be, and that the same \\'111 be
presented to the orphans' Court of
said COUnt1 on I\!onday. December 6,
-
Atty: Robert F. Jackson.
Esq.
P. A. SNElAR. JR., SherIfi'
class of College Avenue School
held a meeting on Thursday. November 11. at. the home of Mrs.
SHBRIFF' SALES .
of~ ESTATE
Charles Schrader on Magill road.
SHERIPF'B OFFICE
The officers for this year 'were
COllRT
MEDIA.
PA.·
Friday,HOUSE.
December
3",1954
announced. Mrs. Schrader and
9 :30 A.M. Eastern Standard Time
Mrs. Carl Atkins are co-hospltalCondition.: t250.00 caah or certldod
'fy
check at t~me of sale (unless other-
.OPEl
,. FRI.
Till' P. M.
Till 6 P. M.
Saturday
chairman. The president of the wise stated in e.dvertisement). balance
mothers group is Mrs. Maurice L. In ten days. Other conditions on day
Webster, Jr. Mrs. Richard EniOn ~n:~e'FACIAS
No. 1040
is program chairmanj Mrs.· CasSeptember Tenn, 1964
par Garrett, secretary-ireasurer,
"All that certaIn' lot or piece of
..
The Kappa Kappa Gamma sewing group will meet on Tuesday.
November 16. at the home of Mrs.
Harry McFarland of Lenni. Those
who wish directions to Mrs. MC;Farland's home may contact
either Mrs. Oliver' G.. Swan at
SW 6-0609 or Mrs. Walter Shoemaker at SW 6-0296.
No. 2o:n West Ninth Street.
CONTAINING In front on the said
Ninth Street measured thence Eastwardly- nineteen feet (19') and extending In depth Southwardly contmulng the same width nlnety-Dve
feet (95'). The Easterly Une passing
through the center of the party wall
between thls. and the cantlguous
(Suc"""""r to PhUaclelphla Trust FIERI FACIAS (ALIAS)
March Term. 1954
Account of Neme D. Bnmke. Adcampany) Trustee for Victoria E.
mlnmtmtrlx, Estate of Henry W11K~lly, U/WUl of William F. Read.
lIam Brunke, Deceased. •
Decep.sed.
BRZOZOWSKI-Qct. 22. The First ROBINSON---Oct. 16, First Account of
and FInal Account of Natalie LohrFidelity-Philadeiphla TrUst Comman. Executrix. Estate of EmUe
pany. Executor, Estate ot MarguerBrzozowski, aJk as Emlly Brzozowlte R. Robinson, Deceased.
skI. Deceased.
RUST-Oct. 29, First and Final AcBUCK-Nov. 3. First and Final Account of George W. Weldy. Jr., Execount of Frank N. Buck. Executor.
cutar, Estate of Emma W. Rust,
Estate or George V. Buck, Sr., DeDeceased.
ceased.
SHROPSHIRE-Oct. 22, First and FlCALLAHAN-Nov. 3. First and Final
nal Account of The Phlladelphia
Account of RBI p h L, Ll n denmu.
th
National Bank. Successor by MerAdmlnlstmtor, Estate of Leonard G.
ger to Chester-Cambridge Bank and
Gallahan , a/k as Leonard Gernrd
Trust Company. Tl;ustee u/WIll of
callahan, Deceased..
James: A. Sbropshlr&, tor Ella LlverDIGIOVANNI--Oct. 29, FIrst and
more.
.
Final Account of Olovannl Dl- STROHM-Nov. 3, Flrstsnd Final AcGiovanni and Plerino DiGiovanni. count of The PhiladelphIa. National
Ad.mJnlstrators. Estate of ~nceBco., Bank. Successor by Merger to ChesDIGiovanni. Deceased.
tar-Cambridge Bank and Trust
PRAME--Oct. 28, Ftrst Account of
Company, Emma B. PhUl1ps and
Pldel1ty-PhUadelphla Trust ComLawrence G. Strohm, Executors,
pany and Herbert H. Smith, Execu..
Estate of Anna Mary' Strohm. De.
!tors Estate f F J
t 1
,
o . osep, ne Frame.
ceased.
' . '
Deceased.
.
THOM'.AS-Oct. 29. First and Final
JUlUtINS-Nov .. 3,. FIrst 'and Final
Account of 8. C. Kelton. Executor.
Account of Albert E. Smith. ExecuEstate of Laura Engel Thomas. a./k
tor, ,EState of Clara B. Harklns,
as Laura E. Thomas, Deceased.
Deceased.
THOMPSON-INov. 1. First and Final
:JIASLEIN-OCt. 15, First and Final
Acoount of Guy W. Davis. ExecuAcCOunt
tor. -tate of ~-'ter
G. A. Thompto Esof Jacob Hasleln. Srd. Exena.J.
.eu r.
tate of Emma Hasleln. De'son, a/k as Walter, A. Thompson
.I:oQ
and walter Thompson. Deceased~
!Ceased. •
ALL THAT CERTAIN lot or piece of
land with the building$. and 'lmprovements thereon erected, SrI'UATE In
the City of Oheater, county 'of Dela.ware and State of Pennsylvania,
bounded and described as follows, to
wlt:BEGINNIJifG at a po1nt on the
Southeasterly sl6.e of a 20 feet wide
alley called Congress Street .at the
distance of 1'18.3'1 feet measured
thence North 70 degrees 44 minutes
40 seconds East from the south~asterly
comer Street·.
at BBld'extending'
Congress thence
Street
and Potter
~....
d
th
Deceased.
1, FirSt and Final
Acco\.nt or ·Ralph L. Lindenmuth,
SUb$tttu~ed Trustee, apPOinted by
Oi'phans Court of Delaware County, May 3, 1954. Estate 01 Clarence
J. LaUbach, Deceased,
LEWONAB--Oct. 28. First and Final
Account of NelUe Lewonas, Ad:minlstra~lx, Estate or Theodore W.
LAUBA?H-NOV.
Lewonas, Decea.sed..
14acMlJRRAY-Oct. 29. First and
Plnal Account. of Miriam M. Lord.
W1Ul~. Deceased.
Executrix. Estate of Elsie Escher WOOD--Oct. 19. First and Final Ac-
Insurance
Company.
Trustee for Laura Messick u/WIII
Deceased" 'La\lra
_ c t , Life Thnant, died May U
of Joseph Messick.
1954.
•
MOORE---Oct. 15. First and "Final Ae~'
count of Rev. John J. McKe'nzle,
Executor, Estate of Harry Moore,
&/k as Joseph Harry Moore, Deceased.
MOR1US-Oct. 27. FIrst and PartIal
Account of Prances Margaret Morl'Is. Executrix, Estate of John Rob ..
ert Moms, a/t .. J. Robert Morris.
Deoeaaed.
Deaeaaed.
.J.,.nme Term. 1953 .
. Lot. & Bldg. SI,t In Darby Townshlp.
Del Co.. PR.• desc. acc. to· survey of
Park Manor Bee. of Westbrook PUk.
THOMAS A. CURRAN
Jl.e«lstK of WIlla and
Clerk of O~han8 Court. made by Damon & FoBte.r, O~ B.,
dated 12120/50. as follow's:. Beg. at
s'llK&IPP IiI/\.LI!:S
pt. on S. B. slde of Spruce St.wblOh
.
or ~ EsTATE
pt. is meas. N. 64 deg. 68 min. B.
\SHERIFF'S OFFICE
489.50 ft. from a pt.; which' pt. is
COURT HOUSE, MEDIA. PA,
meas. on Ql'C: of elrcte cumng ,to It!rt
_Priday, December S. 1964
having rad.. at 150 feet. the arc dlst,
9:30 A.M. Eastern Standard Time
of :lS5.69 feet fr. pt. on S. W. alde of
COnditIon.: ~50.00.caah or certllled Spruoa St.. whleI> pt. Is meaa. S. 25
Check at time of; sale (iJ.n1eaa otIler- dei. ~ mID. E. '16 feet fr a pt.• which
wise stated in advertisement), balance ·pt. Ie meae. on arc of, 91rcle curv1Dg
in ten ,daya. ather condI*naon .day to .11Ir1lt hOvlng'. ,~, of 25 ft., the .
of oate:
'. . .
...., dlat, .of 89.27 ft. 11'. a pt. on S. B.
PIBRI PAOIAB
No. 1126 alde or Pine St.• thonoe _ . along S.
Bepterl'her Term, 19M .
',B.. s. of .Spruoe St. N. M dOli. 58 min.
srr. on NW •. of Sterling A..... (50 B. 16 feet to pt.; tho en. S. 26 deg. 2
feetwlCl6) at dl8t. or 278;3\1 ft, m.... min. B.·thnl • party wall BdJ. on .N.
N. A6 deg. O'SO" B. from NB s. of Pllrk- B. '" crnaaIng a 12 feet ". driveway.
way .(100 ft. wide). In the Tw\>. of 110.18 f_ to a pt.; til. ext. S. 6Ii deg.
Lower OIIIeI>. . . . Del. 00., .Pa.
1I!1l1n. 80 aec. W. 181:_ to a pt.; the
BXTG. tho along NW .. of·8d. Bter- _ •. 11".26 deg. 11 min. ·W. I'OCI'OIiBIng
ling Ave. N
.. ~ .. ~•• 9' 30" B. 20 n, ~ !dJ'l~y ,& tbru. ,.. party wall adl. OIl"
pt; .N.83 del, 110' lAr. W .. III.tl·n,.-r 8. W.;UO.1. f~ to .,,,,,.of _
"",·.S.
"roaalng a 12 ft. wide dr9w:r. eng: 10: B. a. ot SprUce St.) Lo1; 256. _
No.
,nd BW Into BD
.
1eg. SS· W' W. 20.18 ft. to'P'; S. sa
'l'mpKIv6menta _
of " 2 Story
....,..~
deg, 110' SO" ;11:. IIDiI , _ . Inc ,aI. 12 1>rI* .... 1l0U80 11.KII'U""'0&1.... Ne... 8. PInt and PInoI Ae- ft. wide dJ'vwy 101" R. to beI.'
• Sold .. the.ejilqWtl·" AIItbllDy
......t of J .... Hall BIleuer. BueuBBING. No. 1120 (fonnerJy 11'7) B&erc PJorI8IIo ""d II&tIlda Piori(ll1O. . .'. •
aed-te of W1IIam. Co Osten•. Ung A.... ,",,)Une VUJap. Del 00.• Po.. AttJ: lI&urlce)[. Oreon. 1Iiq. ' ,
._ _
. Imptotementa 001IIII81; of & 2 oIory
P. A. SNBAB, JIL. BIIoi14
MOULTON-Nov. 1, Fourth and Pinal
Account of Provident TrUst. Company of PhUadelphta, Substituted
TrU4tee. _te of Elizabeth R.
Kou\ton.
IlUKi'JE'R oct. 27. ~ and PInal
Account 0( '·111=0 .... _\lor _
oull1x. _te of Matthew J. M:ueller. Deceased..
~. '27. TIle _
and I'lDB1
Aenount 0( '1t1e PIrat National Bank
ot DeIa_ COwlty. Media, Penn~~."_ .te of Jam..
""""'oed.
=-
Ib
Up;;:~;bo
3~ lbo
39C
Ib 49<
Up to
LAMB ROAST s~:r:er
~
ROBERT BROOKS
29 EAST 5TH ST
~
15c
--
Elberta Freestone Peaches
2 . - - 49c
Del Monte Grapefrl,llt Sections 3 8-....... 29c
Sl'rJliw4tef Pi;une Juice .
. - .... 3ic
$"",rlll., Tomato Juice
.6-.. an l
Blend"d Juice 1<1,0/ Or.,.p DDd G..~n1'
.~ caD ~~~
I(lnaa~'s Luncheon Meat
1.2··. .··33c
Armour's Corned le.f
IkJi an 43c
Armour's Beef Stew
1'-"'3Ic
Dula~s ..-ill Kidney lean.
.9tka/Brand Cut Reel.,..,. a ~~ -. ~~c
,C
dci%
...• ": ....
NGES
23C
24.z45~
cello
pkg
.w
Pqr
'
.
PIES.
S5e' V~de- Virginia. Lee
:~============:;
Jack Prichard
PAINTING
and
CARPENTRY
..
fittings
IPERSONA~Alterations.
by appointment in your home.
FOR SALE - Three sets o-gauge
Lionel Trains. Miles of track.
5 Association with Estelle Dress Plenty of accessories. Call Andy
i Shop. 69th Street. SWarthmore 6- Hopkins. SWarthmore 6-5015 after
5 :!49:!!3~4~._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ 6 p.m.
§
Charles E. Fischer
!51
CHESTER
---
===-=:-c'"
GfNERAl CONTRACTOR
-
~.!~,~~..! j
3"
New Premium tIasoiJt
I
~tt,~(. ~ ILU••ail. "IS-W
a_AMON smUSSB _aD' -ftC
.I'":~
,
~"te~i-;..~.
i
.: ,
\
SIMCLAI
OWlR-
•
·;.·;Fiis·~} 3:1,
MARkEl,
. ACME .
. '.' CheSter Rd:,
•
~~\
Apple. a..rry. Peach,
Du.ch Apple,
a..rry SrreUssel
.
CHester 4·6246
TlltItiEN
INTRODUcrORY OFF}iR
fJM"ea,
SWarthmore 6-6455
1.,,-______-'-_____""'\
Glensid"e Apple Sauce
216c<>zCO!'" 251;
Sylvan Seal CoHag.C;h.es8~~oe;'!. 1~ ~~c
C;~ft,.dAle. ~se Slices'
.'
Ik>zP~ :J9~
• '_.
Madison
Number Six
Avenue.
and house number 4191
Improvements consist of a 2 story
brlck twin house 21 x 42 feet.
Sold as the property of Edward J.
Brennan.
Atty: George W. Thompson. Esq.
F. A. SNEAR. JR.. SherUf
Builders
Hits' New High in
Knock-Free Powert
Red Ripe Fresh California
I .. SoaP Flake. pq l
I~'.il.t Soap 3 .... ~
",
,
I"...'... 5c
,
and place of beginning. Being
Wm. W. Rumford Co.
PERSONAL - Baby sitting. Re- FOR SALE - Girl's 26" bIke In
BUILDER
sponsible woman. Call SWarth'good working condition. Call
..
Phones:' 4-6311
4-6312
4.6313
'4.6314
a more 6-4251.
SWarthmore 6-4516.
5
5 PERSONAL _ Television, radio FOR SALE - 1952 Ford 6 Ranch
5=_ Sa~uel D. Clyde
Samuel D. Clyde. Jr. ~
and appliance repairs - prompt
Wagon. 19.0.00 miles. Excellent
Swarthmore 6-%253
_
= service. TV setS repaired In the conditinn. $1350. SWarthmore 6~lInlllllmlllllllilllllllllllllllllllllllllnllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllli1II1111111111111111111111111111111111111111111l11111F. more
home. Rotlert. Brooks. SWarth- 4548.
6-3889.
FOR SALE - 3/16th American
PERSONAL _ Wall scrapmg _
Flyer Electric Trains. Like new.
clean cork. Floors arid furniture Half price for 'complete set. Call
.;-.
covered. Paper taken away. Fr.ee SWarthmore 6-8930.
estimates. Call WAshburn 8-6107. FOR SALE - Tricycle and tracEDWARD G. CHIPMAN.
PERSONAL _ Grace Lewis Emtor. Reasonable Phone SWarthAND SON
ployment Agency announces I ~m~0~r;.e:.:6~-:.:7~0~5~6:.:a~f:!te:::r~5-=.
their opening at 34 Walnut Street. FOR SALE Complete set of
Morton. Licensed and bonded.
Nancy Drew Mystery Stories. In
Notary. Phone KIngswood 3-7331. good condition. Call SWarthmore
Plastic: Tile
Tile Floors
6-7501.
.
Modern Kitchens
PERSONAL - Andrew Spanier.
Jr .• 1002 Girard avenue. SwarthWANTED
Alterations
more. SWarthmore 6-2198. Funli=--~---J
ture refinishing. Custom cabinet WANTED ~Mature couple.
1401 Ridley Avenue
work. General Carpentry. Free
children, want to rent house
estimates.
Swarthmore area at modest renCHester 2·4759
~piiE"R:";S"'O~NFA"L'--=--B=en::-dix"';:-'l:h-=o=m:-:e"""a""p--·1 tal. Could rehabilitate and per2·5689
.
fectly maintain neglected propp l lance service. Washers. driers, erty. G. Hurst Paul, Pennsylvania
ironers. Factory trained service- Military College, Chester. CHester
men. General Bendix parts. We
also repair ABC Whirlepool and 4-2559, evenings only.
Kenmore. 51 South Morton ave- WANTED Men, women, and
nue. Call SWarthmore 6-3312.
children who want to solve their
1;;P;;;E;;:R;;S;:O~N~AiiL~~!!!.;~D"r::a~p~e':ri,2e::s~a~n~d;:"""sl;;i'O"p 1 Christmas shopping problems immediately Come to the Holiday
covers. Custom-made. Henrietta Fair, Trinity Church, nex~ WedW. Fricke. SWarthmore 6-1675.
nesday, November 17, 2 to 9 p.m.
PERSONAL - Do you have an and Thursday, November 18. 10
.. upright piano in playable con- t o 5 p. m .
_
dltion which you would donate to WANTED ._ Baby sitting, evethe Anti-Aircraft Group stationed
nings. 50 cents an hour. CHester
here in Sw,!rthmore? Will gladly
call for it. Call SWarthmore 6- 4-3742. .
0311, Lieutenant Mosser.
WANTED - 20" Girl's '!like. with
training wheels. Reasonable.
PERSONAL.- HI-Separates are Phone SWarthmore 6-7056 after 5.
THE THING you know at the
present time and what I have it WANTED Dog house large
you did miss t'would be an awful
enough for collie. SWarthmore
crime. So Why not give a call to 6"4567.
find out more, my friend. Dresses WANTED Young woman to
less than retail "'-- and when seen
assist in local shop. Part-time
are just THE END. KIngs wood 4- during November. Full or part0306.
time in December. Apply Box O.
The swarthmorean.
LOST AND FOUND
WANTED - A Kiddie Koop, also i
FOUND Girl's green bicycle a' small child's rocking boat. Call
on IOIUU. Oil .UININO ........ ",.UU ..
left during Hallowe'en on lawn atter 4 p.m. SWarthmore 6-0554.
of 99 Dartmouth' Avenue. Call WANTED - High School girl for
SWarthmore 6-3774.
waitress work, evening meal.
Dew"
Drop Inn. Experi.enc~ not,
LOST - Small diamond bowknot
DA~ an.d NlORT
pin. Rewind. Call SWartbmore necessaJ:'Y·
WANTED - Woman to work late
6-4893.
OIL BURNER
LOST - Glasses in a brown case, afternoons through dinner. Call
probably near High School. Call SWarthmore 6-2765 to make arrangeme'hts..
. SERVICE
SWarthmore 6-3050.
.lJIONDAY -rmm SATtJRDAY
.
NOON
5
Ib21c
Ib21c
...
.
point
sixty
CLASSIFIED ADS
i
5
/-
.0
beginning
degrees thlrty-nlne
minutes thirty seoonds F.aBt. one
hundred twenty-five feet to a point;
thence stendlng Bauth one degree
thlrty-aeven minutes twenty seconds
West, 29.15 feet to a point: thence
extending South sixty d.greea tb1rt7~
nine minutes thirty &coonM West.
pB88lng partly through the party wall
between these preml.les' and the
premt.ees adJointDB' to the SoUtheast.
110 feet to a point on the Northeasterly side of Madtson Avenue.
thence extendlng along the eamtl
N:ortb twenty-nine d,egrees twenty
minutes thirty seconds West. twentyft~ feet to tbe first mentioned point
North
I
SWEE'NEY & .CLYDE
i
Ib
Juicy Florida 216 Size
tending !rom aald
SEREMBA
Air and Ship Travel
E
5
BHERIFP SALES
ert J. Malloy..Executor&, Estate of YO~t. 21. Flrat.Mi4 Pinal Ac- wjse sta~,\n,IMI~!Sement) ..balan"ce·
Mary E. McGee, Deceaseo;
Oo"mt, of Om~ert A. YOder. Exeen- In" ...
te n da.yo
... '. at,'her conditions on da~
MESSICK~, 18, The Firat and
,tOr. atate:of-Cla.udella·J4'ay Yoder, at: le
Pinal Account of Delaware County
a/k as. CIaudeU 11.. YOder and PiJm.I P.A,OJ.A.l!5,
lip. 6~O
Trust Company, formerly The Dela.;,
·Olat14ella ,M. Yoder,
ware COunty Trust Safe Deposit 4T-ll/12 ..
Rib End
Rib Pork Chops
Ib 43c
Regular Fresh Ground Beef Ib 34c I a 1110 $1.00
Serve Sprl"g Lamb
,
MacMurray, Deceased.
coun.t.ot ,Marlon E. MacMaster. Exeor, ~ ESTATE
McDEvn r--Oct. 18. First and Final
cutrlx, Estate of Alice M. Wood, DesirERIPF's OFFICE
Account of Rose A.. MacDevitt. Execeased.'
COUQ'l':.BOus.:', MEDIA. ·PA.
cutrlx. Estate of James E. McDevitt, YINJt~G-Oc.t. ~. Th.~ First and
FrIday. December 3, 1954
Deceased.
FInal Aecqunt of DelaWlue county
.9 :30 A.M. Eastern Standard Time
McOEE--Oct. 29, First and Fln"l Ac.'n11&t ,~pa.ny. Ad",lntstrator. Eva
,Conditions: f260.00 cash or certified.
count of John ·P. MaUCW; and RobMay·ryltigllng; Deceased:
clleck at;. time of sale (Unless other-
Title
New Crop. from Jender Young Porkers
Harry Sh~ __ r; an
ence y as
mentioned lands and P8S81n~ p~l~ , .through and along the cep.f,er llne.ot
the party waIt between the messuage
~reln described and the D).~age
,
adjoinIng on the s'outhwest Nortii,"19
degrees 15. minutes 20 seconds' West
50.0 reet to the SOutheasterly side of
8$ld Congress. street the first mentloned. point and place of beginning.
TOGElBER with the right and use
of said alleys In common with the
owners or other lands abuttlng
thereon
.
BEING known and designated as
Welsh, Deceased.
No. 516 Congress Street.
WENG--Oct. 16, First and Flna.l Ac-, Under and s.ubJect to the lien ot a
count of Helen Vms, Executrix, First manage held by the American
Estate; of WIlliam J. Weng, aJk B$ ~le Saving and Loa.n A.8&OClatlon In
Wllllam J. Wlng. Deceased.
trie amount or t2.000.00 and since reWILKS-Oct. 27. First and Final Ac- duced by.payments.
. count at M!aggle Ward. AdmtnfB...
Improvements consist ot a. 2 story
tratrlX. estate of John A. C. WOks. brick row house 12 x 30 feet.
Deceased,
Bold as the property of Marjorie
WD..LI.AMS-Oct. 15. First and Final !t(ay Newlin.
Account of Mary E. Hunt, Admln- Atty.: Archie Levy, Esq.
IstratrlX, C.T.A.. Estate of Fredonia
P. A. BNEAR. JR .• Sheriff
llAYES-Nov. 3, FIrst and Final Ac- WEAVER-Nov. 1. First and Pinal Account f Ed
d D ....
o
war
. .L1II.CLa.ug'hUn.
count of Nell Dlaert Weaver, Exe:,eeJ!to&e Estate of Thomas F.
cutrlx. Estate of Robert Emmett
y,
eased.
weaver. Deeeas:ect.
JOYCE-Nov. 3. First Account of The WELSR-Oct. 11; Account of Girard
.Pennsylvania COmpany for Banking
Trust Corn Exchange Bank. (Por:m:'&D.d Trusts, Executor. Estate or
erly known 8S Girard. TrUst Oom-'
Garrett V. Joyce. Deceased.
pany). Trustee for Violet PrImrose
XLO'rZ-NoV. 3. First and Final AcWelEJh and Edward. Ouer Wel8h.
:unt of Frank P. Klotz, Executor,
Estate of Mary E. Welsh, J>eeeased.
tate or Paul Klotp;, Dece84Cd.
WELSH-oct. 11, Accoun1; or Girard
XOONS-Oct. 13, PirSt and Final AcTrust Corn Exchanbe Bank. (rorm.count or Helep, 1,1. B:roWD. Execuerly known Q.B Gtrard TrUst Comtrlx. Estate of Samuel B. Koons.
pany). Trustee. Estate ot Mary E.
0'
for Hom. Repolro
ATLANTIC FUEL OIL
IRON FIREMAN
OIL BURNERS
tJ~eed ~«alltt! 1Iteat4
bIt
Avenue (40 feet wide): thence ex-
Radio
SW 6·3B89-Week Day.
Eves. & Sail day
9
FOR SALE
=~=FOR RENT
FOR RENT-- 224 Park avenue. FOR SALE - Adorable Siamese
Boro. Second floor, two bedkittens. Will reserve for ChristTHOM
rooms, living room, dining room, mas. Also grown female. Call
UPHOLSTERING
kitchen and modern bath. $95. SWarthmore 6-1808.
and
SWarthmore 6-8761
Call 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. SWarth- FOR SALE - Very small dry
SLIP COVERS-DRAPERIES
more, 6-4742.
sink. Decorate with Allison's
Swarthmore Refetenee.
Ph ••• Sharon Hili 0734
FOR RENT - House in Rose Val- Antiques. SWarthmore 6-3050.
More thon 25 year. eJ:perllnce
ley. Immediate occupancy. Two (Watch for our business location,
.~~;,;;;;;;;,;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i bedrooms, two baths. Over acre of Rose Tree, December 1)
CONSTRUCTION
ground. $125 per month. MEdia 6- FOR SALE-Wild goose cast iron
3115.
andirons. Reproductions. Call
RESIDENTIAL AND
and, heatin!! equipment
I
FOR
RENT-Room,
kitchen
prlvSWarthmore
6-1919.
.
Service available to our
PETER 01 NICOLA
COMMERCIAL
ileges for women in teachers FOR SALE - .Bookcase, chest C!f
customers on all malees of
apartment. Call SWarthmore 6drawers, chaIr, and other arb011 burners
8907.
cles. Call SWarthmore 6-0825.
Driveway Construc:Hon
Alterations
FOR
SALE-Parakeet
Customers
Level payment plan on oil
FOR RENT - Large. comfortable
Asphalt or Conc:rete
- I have moved to 11 Turner rd.
bills. Automatic: deliveries
room. Home-like surroundings. Wallingford Summit. One mile
335 Dartmouth Avenue
Convenient to transportation and east of Media just oft' Baltimore
of oil durin!! the heating
·Cellar Walls Re-Plastered
tearooms. Phone SWarthmore 6- Pike. Mrs. James Silva.
season
J. F. BLACKMAN
Phone. Swarthmore 6.2526 4124.
FOR SAI,E - Upholstery cloth at
Guaranteed, Standard Coal
FOR RENT - ' Comfortable 2nd
wholesale prices. Thom SeremSW 6-6616
floor room. Hot and cold water. ba. Upholsterer. Phone Sha.ron
~1I111111111111111111111U1lll11l11l11l1l11l1l1l1l1l11l1mnllllUlUlIIlIllIIllIIlIIlIIlIIlIlIIlIIlIIllIIlIIlIlIIlIlIIlIIlIIllllII1Il1ll1ll1l!§ Adjacent to shower. In private Hill 0734.
11Fr~~~~~~~~~~~~
=
= family. SWarthmore 6-6513.
FOR SALE _ Excellent top soil.
.._~_
A Complete Insurance and. Real fstate Agency
~==
PERSONAL
$10 Call
load.SWarlhmore
Mushroom 6-2078.
soil. $20
load.
PURCHASE OF $15.00 OR MORE.
ASK MANAGER FOR DETAILS
along the Soutbeasterly side ot said
COngress street North '10 degrees 44
minutes 40'seconds East 12.11"feet to
a: comer of lands no'w or l",te ot Harry
Shooster; tb~nce by said ·lands. and
passing partly through and along the
center Une or the party wall between
the messuage herein described and
tJle messuage adjoining on the Northeast South 19 degrees 15 mlnu~ 20
seconds EBBt 50 feet to tlie 'center Une
or a 2 feet wide alley which.opeIl'
into another 2 feet wide alley opening
Into Eighth Str~e~ an4, B 3 feet wide
alley opening Into Congress street:
thence along the. center Una. of said
2minutes
feet wide
olley South
degrees
40 seconds
West7012.11
feet 44
to
a' corner or lands now or late of said
SHERIFF BALES
for
WtTH
'PORK lOINS
Television
Authorized DIStributors
RECIPE BOX
BOOKLET AND
16 ASSORTED RECIPES
.I.ean Fresh
Pille
THE SWARTHMOREAN
RICHMOND D. PEATII_
of REAL ESTATB
CHERlPF'B OFFlCB
I!:ROLF. aIao knoWn .. R. D./
PEATHEROLF. Deceased
COURT HOUSE. MlIDlA. PA.
Letters Testamentary on the above I' 9' Friday, November 19. 1954
Bstate have been granted. to the
.30 A.M. Eastern Standard Time
underatgned. who requesta all
mons
OoncUtlona: 1250.00 cash or certified
having claims or demands agai:t the check at time of ...te (unleu otherEstate ot the decedent to make wIse stated in advertisement) balanoe
mown the same, and all persons 10- In ten days. other condltloDB on day
debted to the decedent to make a _ of sale.
ment. without delay to M1r1am ~~.. PIERI· PACIAS .
No. :1803
ham Fetherolf, 109 COlumbia Avenue
June Term. 1953
Swarthmore PellD8Jlvanta or to th .
ALL THAT CERTAIN lot or piece of
attomeya fo~ the Estate '
e ground wltdl the bul1dlngs and 1JnA DAVID M. SPEERS ESQ
I provements tb.e~n erected, SITUATE
DUANE MORRIs & BECKscitER in the Borough of Prospect Park.
1617 J.,ax{d Title Bulldin
County of Delaware and State· or
Phlladel&;lhla 10 Penna g
Pennsylvania. and baunded ,and. des•.
crlbed as follows. to wit:
BEGINNING at a point on ·the
"I Saw it in The Swarthmorean." 1 Northeasterly side of Madl&on Ave·
nue (40 feet wide) at the distance of
136.73 feet measured South twentynine degrees twenty minutes thlrty
&
~ervice seconds East. a19ng the said side of
Madison Avenue from Its intersection
Compl.t. Stoe.
Tube.
with the Southeasterly side of Fifth
SW 6·4742
WA 8·2440
PLUS VIRGINIA LEE
Deceuef,l.
•
200 W. Ridley Ave.
Rldlev Park
YLOS
frame messuage:'
Improvements consist of a 2lh story
frame dwelling wIth Imitation brick
sIding 15 x 33 feet and a 1 story
frame shed 16 x 10 feet. Enclosed
wise stated In advertisement). bl!lance
RBAD-Oct. 27. First AcCount of Fi- In ten days. other condltlons on day
del1ty-Phlladelphla. Trust Company. of sale.
.
No. 1509
VAN ALEN BROS.
PAIR VIRGINIA LEE
LOVELY SHEER , 51 GAUGE
porch.
Sold as the property of DavId McLaurin and Ethel' McLaurin. his wife.
Atty: LlOYd Oomsn. E~q.
PANTELOPULO~Nov. 3. First and
P. A. BNEAR. JR.•• Sherlff
Final AccoUnt of Constawe P.ante10pUlos. ExecutrIX, Estate of Tom
Pantelopul06. Deceased.
SHERIFF BALES
PATrON-Oct., 29. First and Final Ac' of REAL ESTATE
C9unt of Julia. T. Patton, AdmlnSHElUFF"S OFFICE
lstmtrlx. Estate of Willard S. D.
COURT HOUSE. MEDIA. PA.
Patton, Deceased.'
.
• Friday. December 3. 1954
PECK-oct. 27. First and Pinal Ac9 :30 A.M. Eastern Standard Time
count of EUzabeth MacDade. ExeConditions: e250.00 cash or certlfi~d
cutrlx. Estate ot Mary Ella Peck. check at time of sale (unless Qther-
BRUNKE-Oct. 8, The.l;'lrst and Final
and
Box 48 SWarthmore 6-074C1
Mrs Grace Witter the 3rd tanee of thlrty-dve feet (35') East•
,
, wardly from Jeffrey Street. In the
grade teacher, was speaker at the City of Chester. In the county of
meeting.
Delaware aforesaid, and being known
KAPPAS TO SEW
Metal Work
George Myers.
land with the frame messuage thereon
and Mrs. William Gill, telephone" erected Srr:tJATE on the Southeasterchairman.
ly side of Ninth Street at .the dts-
I
NOTICE
IISTATE OP
Roofiq
GuHers
AIr Co.dlHonln9
MeaHn9
Oil, • Gils •. burners
. 1954. at 10 o'clock .\,1\1., E.S.T., 'or 1
cOnftrmatlon, at whlch time the said
cOurt wlll audit sald accounts. hear
OJl'ceptlons to the same and make, (tls...
trlbutlon of the balance; II8Cftta1ned
to be In the hands or the acoountaus,
AIREY-Nov. 1. FIrst and Final Accout of The Natlonnl Bank of Lansdowne. 'AdminIstrator. Estate of
John Airey. Deceased.
BACON-Nov. 3. First and FInal Account 01 Francis P. Bacon, Admlnlstratar.
Estate of lihlgene
Bacon, Deceased.
BAYNEUM-Oct. 28. First and Final
Account or Tbe Phlladelphia National Bank, Administrator. Estate
of Harry L. Bayneum, Deceased.
BEVERE-Oct. 28. First and Final Account or MIChael DlNauta, and
Darto Tedesco. Executors. uJW1l1
of Giuseppe Bevere a/k 88 Joseph
Beaver, Deceased.
.
BLOURNE---Nov. 3, First and Final
Account of AdeUne R. Blourne, AdminIstratrIx. Estate of Louis A.
Blourne. Deceased.
BOWERS-Nov. I, The Second and
Final Account or Delaware County
TrUst company. formerly the Delaware County 'l'rust sate DepOSit
and Title Insurance Company.
Trustee for Elizabeth D. Marvel. U/
W'1l1 of Tom Bray Bowers. Deceased.
Ellzabeth D. Marvel. Life Tenant
died June 12. 1954.
BOYER-No.3, Second Account of
John B. Boyer and Thorn W. Mock.'
Trustees u/Wlll of Merle S. Boyer,
a/k as M. S. Boyer. Deceased.
BRONSTEIN-Nov. 1. P1rst and Flnal
Account at Martin Bronstein. Adm1nistrator. Estate or Samuel Bronstetn, 8.Jk as Bani Bronstein, De..
ceased.
LEGAL
Sh~t
Our Sw~ore Market Now
,
12, '1954
November
briq.: row hOU8e la x 26 feet.
MOTHERS ELECT
Safd .. the property of Belga,. O.
Urban
and Alice a. tJ.rbaD, his wife.
The mothers or the 3rd grade
I
Swarthmore and Vicinity
SUNDAYS and HOLIDAYS
Baird
'&8ird
...
COAL
FIREPLACE WOOD
. Realtors
J. A. GREEN
'
U
i.'.'
S ·i C,O
.,.'' .
.
· F ·
~
,C.-sTER and
FAIRVIEW ROADS
'..... '.&W- I ....ore ·60368'
., .
."
S.W 6-4041
Many Attractive Homes ~ila""
.
Opposi.. B~'~'" ",an
I
,
~wnrthnore Collegr Lihrary
,
tJ'i![1
THE 'SWARTHMOREAN
Page 10
November 12, 1954
~-------------.----------------~-=~~======~--------.----------~--~~==-=:~~
Mr. and Mrs.. .Roy McCorkel
IJ(l •
Yeadon 0efeated By
Swarthmore 20·13
I Yeadon's changing defense held by Malin, Pappas and Stephani 'Stalag 17'. Hailed
traveled to New Medford, Conn "
I Swarthmore and the Eagles took on the way. At the 45 he was
(Continue!! from page 1)
over at midJleld from where they headed goalward and was never prison guards is understandable. last Tuesday where Mr. McCorkel
started their touchdown drive. Af- to be stopped although tackled by Joseph Gualtier is egitistlcal and gave a' talk on India before a
,
ter two plays in the line, a screen four opponents on the way. Most cruel. Steinfeld's captain is cold church group..
pass to Bob French scored from of the way he was less than a a'nd ruthless.
• 1-------------35
yards out and when the extra foot from the sideline, and in one
Garnet Eleven Seeks
Lewis Beatty's Marko is a nice
point was added, Yeadon had an of the most sensational runs of
Eighth Win
impressive 13-7 lead and exhibit- the year brought the Garnet up character bit as is Pugh's addled
Homey. Edward F. Muller, Jr., as
ed every indication of increasing to 13-13 with their opponents ..
Today
it after the intermission as the
Kroon's extra point was wide~' Bostonian Dunbar; Thomas McComing from behind 13-7, the IIrst half ended.
and the team now must hold, be Fadden as Reed, John F. McCahan
high school footblill team gained
The second canto kick-off by satislled with a tie, or go out and as Herb Gordon appea} to advantage .. Louis Dethloff as the Geneva
its seventh victory of the season Yeadon was deep over the goal win. Th,ey chose the latter.
lInmediately it appeared the man is promising in his IIrst role.
in one of the most thrilling games line, forcing the Gamet to take
Others' who make individual
ever seen on Rutgers Field. A once possession on their own 20,' Forced Yeadon team was now confused
beaten Yeadon high school squad to run deep into their own terri- and upset by the spirited play of contributions to the production
• All your plan. for the
displayed a IIrst half performance tory, the Garnet found difficulty the homesters. On the third down, which pulls the audience into a
future depend upon "keep·
that appeared to assure them of in moving out from the shadow George Pappas recovered another suspense pile~up are W. Robert
ing your health." Take no
eventual victory, but again the of their own goal post. THroughout fumble on the 35 yard line. The Prosser, Harry P. Clark, James R.
chances with this precious
homesters overcame a IIrst half the third quarter Yeadon had the Ile,cals started a touchdown drive Clift. George E. Kenworthy, Ross
posse~sion. See your Doc·
deficit for the second time this upper hand and. was always in lhat was never to stop until that Freer. Bud Weisbrod.
tor at the first sign of ill·
season, In the last qmrrter they position to score. Probably the last stripe was crossed. Hummer
Overheard at the Needlework
ness. Aod always bring us
played with a spirit and determin- turning point of the game took and Coleman did most of the lug- Guild Ingathering was this inhis prescriptions for our
ation that was an inspiration to place when the Garnet held the ging in short driving thrusts quiry: "Do you suppose the Playcareful compounding.
Eagles for downs on the one yard throughout the Eagle line. For the ers Club 'Stalag' exhausted all the
a1l spectators..
til"!le the line started to look suits of long under wear in these
Yeadon received the opening line. From here they klcked out
CATHERMAN'S
kick-off and with speedsters and the increasing spirit and cour- like its old self as holes began parts? We're noticeably short this
DRUG STORE
French and Boyd chewing up age of the Swarthmore boys was to show in the opponent's defense. year."
gobs of yardage lIad moved to the evident as they began to stop It was Oharlie Hummer Ilehind
Zensen, Bowie and Hurd. Lanky
Swarthmore 32, at which point Yeadon at every turn.
. Another big break in the game Pete made good on a "whisiler"
Mr. William F, Lee of Guernsey
Swarthmore recovered the opcame when Yeadon waited until for the extra point and Swarth- road will leave for Cincinnati,
ponent's fumble. Swarthmore set
the fourth down to kick, and a more stood out in front 20-13 Ohio tomorrow •. While in Cincinits IIrst .drive in motion and
bad pass from center gave the with four minutes to go.
nati, Mr. Lee will make a sp.eech
scored when Coleman dashed
. t th thO d
before the Life Underwriters AsAt
this
45
d
pom
e
If
Was Yeadon a better team?
through a Bowie-Stephani hole o n .
. d
d d
d S
th
sociation.
for eight y.ards and the touch- per'o
en e
an
war more Here was their chance and four ijiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliii
down. Fullback Hummer and started to playas never before. golden minutes to prove it. They
Coleman speareaded this initial After their IIrst attempts were tried one running play and then
drive. Pete Kroon converted, and thwarted an out-of-bounds kick threw that hope.d for long pass
Swarthinore led. 7-0 at the quai- by Dick Snyder put Yeadon on which was promptly intercepted
ter, This was not to last long as their own 25. Three plays at their by cal Coleman backed up by
Yeadon got r011lng in' quick order. line gained nothing for the Eagles, Randy Malin on the Swarthmore
Mixing passes with running, and this set the stage for one of 30 yard line. Three and a half
fiashy Boyd just seemed unstop- the most thrHling plays seen on minutes remained and possession
' . Your New DODGE Dealer.
pable. It was only four minutes till Rutgers Field. Dick Snyder re- of the ball was all that wI's needed
the second quarter when Yeadon ceived the Yeadon punt and re- now. On the third play Hummer
_ had their IIrst touchdown. Missing versed to Cal Coleman, who broke through a fir~t down. A 15
an extra point, Swarthmore still steamed through the sideline at yard pena.lty for roughness placed
midlleld, picking up three blocks the ball on the 'lI'eadon 40: Two
led 7-6.
more plays and Swarthmore was
knocking on the touchdoWn door
250 Yale Avenue
as the game ended.
. Other boys who did a line job
were Allen Bowen, Preston Hol• See the spectacular and Forwar~-Iooking •
lander, John Lewis, Ed Noyes and,
as usual, .steady-heady Randy
Malin at quarterback.
Constantly improving, wlnJess
Prospect· Park visits Rutgers Field
today 'at 2: 45. Regardless of past
records, Prospect Park has always given ,the Garnet a busy
afternoon up to' the very last
whistle.
VOLUME 26-NuMBER 47
Local Man Receiv~'s'
• 'Man of Century~
. . Award
Asso~,ation
Omega Tau' Rho 'Fraternity of
the National
ot Real
.
Estate.Boarcli; presente'dtlie "Man
at the Century" award to Ph',II'p
W. Kniskern, 507 R,'verv,'ew road,
at a dinner on November 7 durng the N'ational Real Estate Con"vention in Cleveland, Ohio.
The citation in the award read,
"In deep appreciation for his brilIiant and inte11igent" leadership
and
hisadvancement
outstanding contributions
of' .our' buslto the
ness."
Kniskern Is president of the
First .Mortgage.Corporation, PhiJadelphia, and chaII'man, of ihe
Board of Directors of the First
Federal Savings and Loan Association of New York, New York.
A former president of the National
Association at Real Estate Boards:
the American Institute of Real
Estate. Appraisers and the Urban
Land Institute, and one of the
country's beSt kito",n realtors; he
conducls an appraisal "artd rl!ai
estate counse10r service involving
varied questions which affect real
estate dec'islons ...' "... '.
Morton. Pa.
1955 DODGE
REMEMBER, DODGE SHOWS YOU
For a "reelsharp"
lawnmower
Call
M1CHAEL'S COLLEGE PHARMACY
HOW THEY DID IT., NOV. 17
REELSHARP, SW 6-4100
Small Motor Specialist
. on the corner in Swarthmore
WE DELIVER
SW 6-0857
1llllmllUllllllllnlllllllllDIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII'1II111111IIIIIIIIIIIIInI1l11l1111111111111111111111111111111111111111
lPA~"'"
•
DELIVERY SCHEDULE
FOR THANKS91VING WEEK
ESTER'S Fashion Corner
EDGMONT AVE. - 7th AND WELSH STS.
SHAGMOOR
•
MEANS
MORE
MORE STYLE
JUST SEE THE MANY DIFfERENT ST,YLES SPEARES HAS DISPLAYED ... GR~AT COAT, BOY COAT, BOX COAT AND MORE.
MORE FOR YOUR MONEY
SHAGMOOR COATS ARE CUT FULL AND WIDE-NOT SKIMPY~
OR TIGHT. WARMLY LINED
111.·....111
.. £
; I....•• c.'", - ..... • ....."••
, ....' ....
• . 100 PvIi: Ave.. S"all......... , ..
SWarthmore 6-6000
d'At4I,o," • ,a".
THE'NAME SHAGMO'OR MEANS JUST THAT TO
, ALL WHO REC·
OGNIZE FINE COATS
2nd Roor
~
t.
HARRIS. & CO, .
TAILOIS
... FUIIIIIS
11 Park Avenue
M9RE. OUA~ITY
Swarthmore
H"....:.....
The Swartbmorean deadline
bas been moved up to 10 a.m.
Tuesday, November 23, because
of the Thanksgiving Holiday.
Union Wheels Grind
Toward Realization
Swarthmore - Rutledge
Schools Soon· Plan •
Service Wedne'sday
For Albert G. Brown ;:
Wl'lll'am F" :Oe1ehant
1
Y
- T0day
SerY~CeS
.
!
YaIe A venue Resi dent
Dies Suddenly
. T. u e s d a y '
Chosen to Head
Inves' tment Bankers
Together
-'
A. David M, Speers, legal counIf'
;rt
Swarthmore School'
oar, 0 d the Board WednesdjlY
.'
th at final. County aod
everung
St
t
Albert G. Brown, fath~r of Mrs,
a e approval of the union of
b
A
Swarthmore
and Rutledge school
Ro ert . Sheppard, of 211 Vassar d' t I
IS r cts passed by voters on 'Noavenue J died Monday m.orning at -v:ember 2;· is expected by early
Elnwood, Baltimore pike. Mr. next year. Mr. Speers said that by
Brown suffered a broken hip in F e b ruary. the Boards showd
be
'
a faU live weeks ago and after l able to begin calculations on 'a
d b ~ d ge t for operating the
two weeks in Taylor
h~d co~b'medistrIct
. Hospital 'untted
as· of the new IIscal
been convalescmg at l Elnwood. year which begins in July.
~he
.
ASSOCI'atlon to Report
On Teachers Sal'
arIes'
::Sllnen
- 'HIGH GRADE CLEANING,
PRESSING and REPAIR
............ ,"'
EAIlLY· DEADLINE
'" •
•
surVeYs
LADIES and MENS
. SUITS MADE·TO·ORDER
w. , ....,. 'a.rla of , ..
SWarthmore 6-05Q4
'Walter A. Schmidt
The. a.nllu.al Community
Thanksgiving Day Service will
. be held 011 ThurSday, November
. 25,. at 10 a.m. ~~ Trinity Episcopal Church.
,: Mliiisters from 'he A.M.E.,
Methodist, and Presbyterian
Chorches will assist In leading
the service, and the speaker will
. be John Moore of the Swarthmore Friends Meeting.
David F. M. Ulrich will be the
Is
organ t, and the Girls' Choir of
Trioity Church will lead the
singing
.a.50 PER YEAR
F,,?eral se;vices at Oliver Bair's,
Members of the RutJedgeBoard
Philadelph,a at 2.30 Wednesday and that borough's teachers will
afternoon were followed by int';r- be Invited to attend an Informal
. Funeral services will be held
me."t in ~ount P~ace cemetery,meeting. of the Swarthmore Board
today at 2 p.m. in a Chester FunPhIladelphia.
at the home ofUie president,
eral' Home for William F.' De- Local. Man Honored by . Born in Philadelphia on Decem- Donald P. Jones, at '7:30 Wedneslehanty, of. Yale avenue, 74, execN
.
.
ber 16, 1874 later lived· in New day evening, 'December 1, when
utive se,cretary of the Chamber at
ationol Investment
Jersey and Ihen was in the In- f 0 u r Swarthmore ~ elemen'tary
Commerce of the City of Chester
Group
suraitce business In Philadelphia teachers will disc1:osS various areas •
and Delaware CoUnty, who died
for 25 years befqre retiring and of teaching reading.
at 10 A.M. Tuesday while waiting
Rivei-vieVf road resident Walter cotnll)g to live with Mr, and Mrs.
The Board approved final pDV_
f
from his home.
. Philadelphia, has been nominated who accompanied him to Swarth- Rutgers avenue school wing havSwarthmore policemen "Bill" as the nert president of the 10- more,. died here in August, 1952. ing been fully completed.
..
UrvlV
A schedule for use of· the RutWidner and Chief Bateman and 'A
vestment
Bankers Association of
S
· · Ing b eSI'dP Mrs. Sheppard
the Springfi~ld 'i'o~sin'p amb";- merIca.
are two grandchildren: Margaret gers bull ding was reviewed. The
Jance crew worked a half hour to
Nominatipns, lI)8de. by the (MrS. Harold M.l McCorkel of policy for the present will permit .
revive him before he was pr~ Board of Governors, are conslder- llummelsloWn' and Robert' A free use of the bullding to school
n~unced dead by Dr. William Y. :ed tantamount to election in the Sheppard, Jr., of Dover, Del.; and parent groups up until 10 P.M.,
l1i
0. Hi,al, of.215 Harvard avenue, I.B.A., which will'!!'ct on the ticket four greal-grandchildren Cath- the same as at the High School aIThe thirtieth aimual; Thanks- Swarthmore. His body was taken aUts annual convention scheduled erine and. Donald McCorkel alld th01,lgh it will' necessitate some
giving Day football game between t~ his. home at 200 Yale a.'~enue.·for November 28--December 3 1\(. Robert, . 2rd and Judith Lonise extra expenditure by the Board
Swarthmore 'a n d.. 'I.llnsdowne;'~' ,:qelejta'!ty. was a native of :the Hollywood Be a c h Hotel,' Sheppard.
'
to cover janitorial servi~es not
shapes up as ~ ,of. !hI!; o~.l;l~sto~ .where'his.father.the.la~e HoIJywood,.Flori~a.
...
nprmally.re~ed.at the Rutgers'
standing games of the season.
Thomas F. Delehanty; was'at·one-··.Mr.. S""midl--h""devotedbls·en-·
Arts' Cenfer'Exhibit'
building after daytime hours.
Last. year Lansdowne's victory time Immigration Commissioner. tire business~ career, almost 43
Nominal charges were set to cover
moved them ahead In the series He attended school in that city years, to the securities busin~.
The Cbmmunity {\rts Center in expenses in the case of other
t ..,_ with 14 wina
d 9 ti-'- and read law in various offices' He entered the investment lIeld at Waltlngfo~d is presenting a guest groups w.hlcli might· be gran.ted
5 an........s ..
.'
an .... ... 'there, 'being admitted' to th'l!' Mas- Iheage of 16· 'UPOIl graduation Exhibition starting Sunday, Noas against Swarthmore's 13 wins.
vember 21, at 3 o'cloCk with the use of the multi-purpose room In
The season record this year re- sachusetts bar In 1910.
from high school in Hinsdale,
the new wing.
'
veals three victories for the
He became a draftsman. for the 111Inois, the town of his birth. The works of three nal\onal,ly known
Property Chairman Samuel T.
hi
ffi
f Whl
.
artists Morris Berd, Antonio ilfar"Lorpg,'" 'one tie. IU)d three .losses Lake Submarine Torpedo Ship- C cago 0 ce 0
Ie, Weld &
Carpenter reported the contract
with one game with 'Up'per clii- 'building Co'.. in Bridgeport, Conn., Co., employed him as messenger tina, and Albert ~,Serwazi. Tea for relocating a manhole at Rut.
d h
d
d
Id
h
will be sllIVed at theopen1ng on'
chester to be played tomorrow.
during 'the First World War. an
e a vance rap Iy trough
. (Continued on' Page 11)
Afterward he was tran.-erred by various departments _ cashier, Sunday to which members and
Swarthmore, being undefeated, that firm to Chester and became statistical,· and tradbtg _ to be- their guests will be invited, and CONVERG" ON LIBRARY
of course looks to comparative rean .opportunity will be offered to
t
suits with niiltlml opponents. AI- 'affi1iated with the Chester Ship- come a member of the sales staff. meet these distinguished artists.
though Lansdowne lost to Yeadon building' Co., in charge of hull
After 10 years with whlte, Weld The hostess for the tea will be
Tomorrow morning at 9:30 the
and Springfield, they decisively construction.
& Co., Mr. Schmidt ,was, in 1922, Mrs, Jessie T. Vogdess of Media, Swartjtmore Public Library will
defeated Darby 40-0 and trounced
For a time thereafter he was in made manager of the bond de- and she will be assisted by Mrs. be 'the' objective of the Borough's
Sharon Hill and Media ....with the oil business and Jater became parlment, Standard Trust and 1l,. W. Woodward and Sally Wood- younger readers w~en the new
scores much the same as the Gar- areal estate ~roker. He was ap(Continued. on Paglo 12)
ward"both of Moylan.
. books exhibited durmg Childreo's
net's. Lansdowne, plagued with pointed lIeld secretary of the
D
e
l
'
S
.
h
Ii'
•
N
wt
will go into circula12)
erw&Zl 'w 0
ves m e own Book
tion. Week
.
injuries all season, will be at full
(Continued on Page
Square studied at the PennsylAnnounce Scho.ol Holidoy
Librarians Bettina Hunter. and
h
P ysical stt:engih and w111. cerc
..' .
vania Academy of Fine Arts. He
tainly look to' the Thanksgiviog
In . observance of the holiday ~as exhibited at ·ilie
report clrcula-·
a busy
. Metropolitan Mrs.
week Ross
with Thomson
above normal
h
D ay clash to salvage their cam-I.
season,
all' t e Swarthmore Schools Museum in New York, The Phila- tion of books an.d visitors to the
paign.
" .
m
grades w11l close for the delphia
Museum, Carnegie In- Book Week exhibit. Tuesday was
. tit t . Art.
Pittsb
Th k gi .
Swarthmore, onth" o.ther hand,
A' report on :salaries paid to
an
on Wed- s
urgh,"Golden
.
I u
t e In
ti
IE
. Gate
S
the busiest day when morning"
d s vmg vacation
wiII be :seeking Its' fifth unde- teachers in the Swarthmore nes ay noor' Novemb!,~ .2~ and Fr
n ema
ona
xpOSItton,h
a11 visits to tke Library, by the Col- '
.
C
\if '.
111
schOOls will be gl'ven at .t.he meet- w
reopen' for classes again on
a Iorma.
re- lege Avenue Kindergarten, the
feated season since 1946.
'anClSCO,
ed'
d sHe
' Iasdin'
M
N ovember 29 at the CelV.
'ng
of
the
Swarthmore
Home
and
ond,ay,'
severa
awar
mc
u
g fourth grade and a Brown.ie Troop
th J H
S
Seniors who will be playing I
S'
chool
•
-sociation
on
TUesday,
usual
hour.
.
e
.
enry
cheidt
Memorial
'
the! r last game for the gam~t
""
.
tho A'
preceded the 'usual afternoon
and white are Co-captalns Perry November 23, at 8 p.m. In the
The Thanksgiving assembly of pnze
at fore his
cademy
of Fine
. 1941
. tin
th Arts
R d hours and the evening Book Week
Dellmuth and Roger Zensen, Carl high school auditorium.
the Jurrlor-Senior High School 10
pam g e e Open House.
.
.
Thomas, Stu Bowie, Preston HolThe Teachers Salaries Slndy wiUbe held Wedtlesday morning, Table Cloth. This canvas was
Parents, teachers took advanlander, Ed Noyes, Randy Malin, committee, headed by W. New- in the school auditorium•. Thil< purchased by the Academy for.its tage of the evening· to browse
John Cole",an, Manuel Ha11ler, tOil Ryerson, has made a thorough will be a 'mu~lcal program of un- permanent collection.
through the new titles at lelsure
Steve Carter, Bud Stephani, Mike study of the problem. Otller com- 'usual excellence, and will be In
Martino, who studi~ at Penn- and .to receive from Mrs. Ann
lIurd and Manager Dave Preston. mittee members include .WilUam charge at the music teachers. I sylvania Museum' .School of In- P
They are sure to be nusse'd as M. Bush, John W. Carroll,~aJUn
Don-Bette]' 0 Goodall and' Robert M. 1CI
dustriaJ.
Art, the ,Graphic
Sketch
ennellbooks
of Bookways
a 1Isj; ofhome
sugb LaFran
T~'"
aJs gested
for a chlld's
M
tthh~r play in the development of aid P. Jones, Myrtle G'G L'-' W' Holm. Followinl1 the assembly, 11 ues'in Newt ce Sq~"tuteAm' 0 library and from MiSs Hunter a'
IS und efeated season has been Harry E. Oppenlander,
•
v·
own
uare..
.... separated
d J hn eorge
W Sey . t,here" will be
. a brief pep r~IIy m
the
many- museums
In which ong
he list for library reading
an inspiration to all who have Patterson III, an
0
, •
- the gymnasIUm In preparation for h
exh'blted .' th Whi
into age groups. Mrs. Pennell urgWatched them.
bold. The findings of the com- the annual Thanksgiving Day Mas
, f'N are
e
tney ed parents· to read aloud to chUTh
at mittee will be presented by New- game.
useum 0
ew York. and the
L e game will take place
R erson John Seybold, and
Corcoran Gallery, Washingion, D. dren, She quoted Dr. flank Aydeansdowne this year.
ton : Patt~rson, and slides will
This annual football game with C. He is the reclpieot of many lottes' statement to the American
STAHTING LINEUP
Georg d to illustrate' the report. La~sdowne willbeplayedThanks- awards ~cluding the First Prize 'Association for the Advancement
8lVarihm
"
be US~ttee members wt1l serve givmg Day mOrnltlg on'the.Lans- at DaVincl Exhibition, and t1le of Science that"chlldren of homes
Ii:
-.
. 'lAnsdowne comnu nel at the close' of the downe field. With kick-oft time at First Altman Award at the Na- where there were plenty of books
T :~-:aOPllpasander
4l-WE!rlz as ~n~a to answer any questions. 10 a.m.- Swart1itnoreans . desiripg tional Academy 'If DesIgn.
to ~d and ~ed fiver and over
G 77_"-wle
55-LaRuche mee W'IIi'm E Arnold .director good seats .should arrive ear,ly. The
~rd who graduated from the were the most likely .,.,nege
.DU
35-8eItzer
Dr
1 a ·
'
.
, School, and has painted material."
C 44-Zensen
.' Educational
Service
Bur- mornIn g on the Lansdowne
field. Museum
G
47 Stratton of th;'hOOI of Education, Unlver-, With kick-oft time at 10. a.m. and studied ·in Mexico, . lives in
On d~lay In complete repair
T ~Thomas
46-AltemUS e~u, of pennsYlvania, win .speak SwarthmoreBIllj desiring goo d Glen Riddle. His pictures appe&r for the IIrst time since .the Library \
Ii: 53-..; Noyes
59-PulleY plY
his department seats should arrive early. The in the Barnes Foundation, the fire were the Ll!n-ary>s ortg\naJ
QB ltroon
41!-IngraJU on the ade on the salary scale.' Swarthmore,band and,cheerJead- P~JvaniaAcademy, llie I.Y- illustrations for the Macrae-Smlth
lUI 42-M'aUn
28--::Alden have
ts will. be Se:t .ed 1;>Y ers will be onhllnd to add .,.,lor m,.,,! AllIson MU$Dn, New. Lon- edition of HeldL Mrs. .Howard
l.!i ~~erlQl . 2fi-',1enzano R~tb Grade mothers at ':30 and life to wbat ls e:ape..oted to be don; andnUliAOWI ~te col- Slplsr.repalred the pictures, as a
Pa ~
S9-Jeakin.s. the In' the' -_...ter!a....
an exceUl!Ilt football game. ' . ' leetiOll8-'''''
.'
contrlbutlo.~n to theLlbraiy..
.
.--])e,
nm1itb
45-Md)oUga11
p.m.
.
....
~
.
,
"
,
.
.
.
.
'
.
.
'
.
.
,
.
'
""".,
.
. ' .
I
.> ..
.
THURSDAY deliveries will be made TUESDAY.
FRIDAY deliveries will be made MONDAY.
WEDNESDAY deliveries will be made WEDNESDAY.
No pick-ups except emergencies during Thanksgiving Week.
Rugs may be picked up the week before for Thanksgiving
delivery.
.
To avoid disappointment:
I. Please allow at least one week's notice for removal of
rugs from storage.
.
2. Please do not ask us to de"iaie from our schedule.
3. To help us maintain our sc1!edules, o.ur drivers are instructed not to spread rugs at delivery unless arrangements have been made in advance with our office.
4. Please be at home when your rugs are expected. Do not
ask us to make "call.backs" 'Thanksgiving Week.
SEALS
GarnetMeetsLansdowne
Thanks ving Day
THERE'S NO REASON TO WAIT-
WE FEATURE FINE QUALITY GIBSON CARDS
CHRISTMAS
SWARTIlMORE, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 1954
Real Estate Frattrnity .' .Thaliksgivi~g Day Service
Honors .Knt"skern
GUTHRIE-SMITH, INC.
BUY YOUR CHRISTMAS CARDS NOW!
:,THE SWARTHMOREAN
T. B.
COMING! WEDNESDAY, NOV~ 11
SO . BRING IN YOUR CARD LlST-
rthlI!ore
..
,.
-. f · ·
I
I
'.
iNTENTIONAL SECOND EXPOSURE
Page 10
, )"
November 12, 1954
THE SWARTHMOREAN
j
Yeadon Defeated By I
Swarthmore 20 .13
Yeadon's changing defense held by Malin, Pappas and Stephani 'Sfalag 17', Hailed
Mr, and Mrs, Roy McCorkel
I Swarthmore and the Eagles took on the way, At the 45 he was
inued
from
page
I)
t
rave
id
e t a N ew M e df or,
d C Ollll"
(Cont
over at midfield from where they headed goalward and was nevel'
started their t~uchdo\~n drive. Af- to be stopped although tackled by prison guards is understandable. last Tuesday where Mr. McCorkel
?
ler two plays In the hne, a screen lour opponents on the way. Most Joseph Gualticr is cgitistical and \gavc a talk on India before a
pass to Bob French scored from of the way he was less than a cruel. Steinfeld's captain is cold church group.
Garnet Eleven Seeks
35 yards out and when the extra foot from the sideline, and in one and ruthless.
---------Eighth Win
point was added, Yeadon had an of the most sensational runs of
Lewis Ileatty's Marko is a nice
impressive 13-7 lead and exhibit- the year brought the Garnet up character bit as is Pugh's addled
Today
cd every indication of increasing to 13-13 with their opponents.
Horney. Edward F. Muller, Jr., as
it after the intermission as the
Kroon's extra point was wide, Bostonian Dunbar, Thomas McComing from behind 13-7, the first half ended.
and the team now must hold, be Fadden as Reed, John F. McCahan
The second canto kick-off by satisfied with a tie, or go out and \ as Herb Gordon appeal- to advanhigh school football team gained
it!' seventh victory of the season Yeadon was deep over the goal win. They chose the latter.
tage. Louis Dethloff as the Geneva
in one of the most thrilling gamcs line, forcing the Garnet to take
l'mmed~ately it appeared the man is promising in his first role.
cver seen on Rutgers Field. A once possession on their own 20. Forced Yeadon team was now confused
Others who make individual
• All your plans for thc
beaten Yeadon high school squad to run deep into their own terri- and upset by the spirited play of contl"ibutions to the production
di~playcd a first half performance tory, the Garnet found difficulty the homesters. On the third down, which pulls the audience into a
fumre depend upon "keep·
that appeared to assure them of in moving out from the shadow George Pappas recovered another suspense pile-up arc W. Robert
ing your health." Take no
eventual victory, but again the of their own goal post. Throughout Cumbie on the 35 yard linc. The Prosser, Harry P. Clark, James R.
chances ,"",hh this precious
homcsicrs overcame a first half, the third quarter Yeadon had the locals started a touchdown drive Clift, George E. Kenworthy, Ross
possession. See your Doc·
deficit for the second time this uPl~e~ hand and was always in {hat was never to stop until that Freer, Bud Weisbrod.
tor at the first sign of illseason. In the last qu~rter they p051110n to score. Probably the last stripe was crossed. Hummer
Overheard at the Needlework
ness. And ah",ays bring us
pl~yed with a spirit ~nd ?et~rmin- ,turning point of the game took and Coleman did most of the lug- Guild Ingathering was this inhis prescriptions for our
atlOn that was an lnSpIratIon to placc when the Garnet held the ging in short driving thrusts quiry: "Do you suppose the Playcareful compounding.
d
all spectators..
,Eagles for downs on the one ya r
throughout the Eagle line. For the ers Club 'Stalag' exhausted all the
t
Yeadon received thc opening line. From
here
.
" they. kicked Oll .first time the line started to look suits of long under wear in these
CATHERMAN'S
kick-ofT
and with speedsters and the increasIng spIrit and cour- like its old self as holes began parts? We're noticeably short this
DRUG STORE
French and Boyd chewing up age of the Swarthmore boys was to show in the opponent's defense. yea ... "
gobs of yard~ge had moved to the evident as thcy began to stop It was Charlie Hummer behind
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
Swarthmore 32, at which point Yeadon at every turn.
Zensen, Bowie and Hurd. Lanky
Mr. William F. Lee of Guernsey
Swarthmore recovered the opAnother big break in the game Pete made good on a "whistler' road will leave for Cincinnati,
ponent's fumble. Swarthmore set came when Yeadon waited until for the extra point and Swarth.
.
.
.'
its first drive in motion and the fourth down to kick, and a more stood out in front 20-13 OhiO tomorrow. WhIle In CInclOscored when Coleman dashed bad pass from center gave the with four minutes to go.
nati, Mr. Lee will make a speech
through a Bowie-Stephani hole don 45. At this point the third
W as Y ea d o~ a b e tt er t earn.? sociation.
before the Life Underwriters As-I
T. B.
Real Estate Fraternity
Honors Kniskern
COMING! WEDNESDAY, NOV~ 11
GUTHRIE·SMITH, INC.
For a "reelsharp"
•
lawnmower
Call
M1CHAEL'S COLLEGE PHARMACY
HOW THEY DID IT, NOV. 17
REELSHARP, SW 6·4100
Small Motor Specialist
on the corner in Swarthmore
£PA.J~
DELIVERY SCHEDULE
FOR THANKSGIVING WEEK
\
\)
\
THURSDAY deliveries will be made TUESDAY,
FRIDAY deliveries will be made MONDAY,
WEDNESDAY deliveries will be made WEDNESDAY.
No pick.ups except emergencies during Thanksgiving Week.
Rugs may be picked up the week before for Thanksgiving
H"'''''~' • Compl... Sbe Baa.. • ............
, 100 P..d: Ave" s..rth-, ....
SWarthmore 6-6000
(Jl~.,.lso ....
_...
ESTER'S Fashion Corner
SHAGMOOR
MEANS
MORE
MORE STYLE
SHAGMOOR CO'ATS ARE CUT FULL AND WIDE-NO'T SKIMPY,
OR TIGHT. WARMLY LINED
MORE QUALITY
THE NAME SHAGMOOR MEANS JUST THAT TO ALL WHO' RECOGNIZE FINE CO'ATS
' 2 n d Roor
~:
TAILORS
and FURRIERS
~
11 Park Avenue
"'.011_liliiii""
Swarthmore
Alm. .mtmm.llhHitAhiiI.......1IlmlHiD4'
=
=
William F. Delehanty
Servjr.ns Today
LADIES and MENS
SUIT~ MADE-TO-O'RDER
We Featare Fabrics of tile Hlgllest Grade
SWarthmore 6-0504
iiiiiiiiil
MiSJIP.HIiiiIiI. . . . . . .aMiliiimiL.
i - H I G H GRADE CLEANING,
!
PRESSING and REPAIR
=
I
MMillMiiiiUilHHnMitiiiidRkbiliiRiiUliiuft€
·.ti.
EstabJllhcf
• •, . . .
In
h
II
SI .
I
MORE FOR YOUR MONEY
• ..
19~
d4-
told the Ilomd Wednesday
that IInal Count:·.. and
even~ng
Albed G. Browll, father of 1\11'5.
Robert A Sl'
.ct
'. lCppal ,of 211 Vassar
avenue, dlCd Monday m,orning at
Elnwood, Baltimore pike. Mr.
Brown suffered a broken hip in
a fall five weeks ago and after
two weeks in Taylor Hospital, had
been convalescing at t Elnwood.
I
JUST SEE THE MANY DIFFERENT STYLES SPEARES HAS DISPLAYED ... GREAT COAT, BOY COAT, BOX COAT AND MORE
1II1l1l1ll11ll1l11ll1ll1ll1ll11llUlIIIIIIIIlIlIlIlIIIllIII'1II111111111111111111l1ll1l1 nlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllnmmII
lll
RlmllllllllllllllllllllAllRllll11ll111llllllllllllllRlIlIlIlUllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllnnlllllllllRlIllliiiiiiiilmnnHDllUllIlllllll\UmmmnnlllUlnDHlDlIIlIlllllllllnllllllllllllllllllUlIIIDHlUlDHIl\UUIIIIIl1!IRIIllnmmllllllDlIIWIIIMllllldIIIIlIIIUlllmO••nnllmIIAI ..lI1IIUi1U8d1Mmmlll
~
A. David M. Speers, legal counsel for the Swarthmore School
re_1
III . . .
HARRIS & CO.
Service Wednesday
For Albert GBrown Iloar~I,
!I
Trinity Church will lead the
singing.
n
EDGMONT AVE. - 7th AND WELSH STS.
delivery.
(PAt4I~t\" V Comge~,-
I
be John l\[oore of the Swarth-
more Friends l\leeting.
David F. 1\1. Uh·jeh will be the
organist. and the Girls' Choir of
i
WE DELIVER
SW 6-0857
ilill n111111111111111111111111111111111 1llllllll1ll1ll1ll1ll1l1ll11ll1l1ll'IIlil1II1I1I1II1I1l1l1l1ll11l1111ll1l1ll111l1l1l1l1ll1l1l1ll1IIIIIlIll
To avoid disappointment:
I. Please allow at least one week's notice for removal of
rugs from storage.
2. Please do not ask us to deviate from our schedule.
3. To help us maintain our schedules, our drivers are instructed not to spread rugs at delivery unless arrange·
ments have been made in advance with our ollice.
4. Please be at home when your rugs are expected. Do not
ask us to make "call-backs" Thanksgiving Week.
I
the service, and the speaker will
I
REMEMBER, DODGE SHOWS YOU
WE FEATURE FINE QUAlITY GIBSON CARDS
Churches will assist in leading
I
Swarthmore - Rutledge
Schools Soon Plan
Together
of the Thanksgiving Holiday.
I
1955 DODGE
BUY YOUR CHRISTMAS CARDS NOW I
The Swartlunorean deadline
has becli moved up to 10 3.m.
Tuesda~·. N'o\'cmber 23, because
Chosen to Head
Investment Bankers
Here was t helr chance and f au r i~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii_iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii_iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil
golden minutes to prove it. They'
tried one running play and then
threw that hoped for long pass
which was promptly intercepted
by Cal Coleman backed up by
Randy Malin on the Swarthmore
30 yard line. Three and a half
minutes remained and possession
• Your New DODGE Dealer.
of the ball was all that was needed
now. On the third play Hummer
broke through a fir.t down. A 15
yard penalty for roughness placed
the ball on the Yeadon 40: Two
more plays and Swarthmore was
knocking on the touchdown door
250 Yale Avenue
as the game ended.
Other boys who did a fine job
were Allen Bowen, Preston Hol• See the spectacular and Forward-looking •
lander, John Lewis, Ed Noyes and,
as usual, steady-heady Randy
Malin at quarterback.
Constantly improving, wInless
Prospect Park visits Rutgers Field
today at 2: 45. Regardless of past
records, Prospect Park has always given ,the Garnet a busy
afternoon up to the very last
I whistle.
Morton. Pa.
SO BRING IN YOUR CARD L1ST-
SEALS
State appro\'al of the union of
Swarthmore and Hutlcdgc school
I districts passed by voters on November 2,· is expected by early
r.ext year. IVIr. Speers said that by
read, I
February the Boards shou1ct be
I In deep appreCIatIon for his bril- I
able to begin calculations on a
liant and intell~gent leadership
combined budget for operating the
and hIS outstandmg contributions
.l:1tJ
•
united district as of the new fiscal
to the advancement of our busiyear which begins in July.
Yale Avenue Resident
ness."
Funeral services at Oliver Bair's
Members of the Rutledge Board
Dies Suddenly
Kniskern is president of the
Philadelphia at 2.30 Wednesda; and that borough's teachers will
First Mortgage Corporation, Philafternoon \\'ere followed by inter- be invited to attend an informal
Tuesday
adelphia, and chairman of the
ment in Mount Peace cemetery, meeting of the Swarthmore Board
Funeral services will be held
Board of Directors of the First
Philadelphia.
at the home of the president,
Federal Savings and Loan Asso- today at 2 p.m. in a Chester FunBorn
in
PhiJadelphia
on
DecemP. Jones, at 7:30 Wednesciation of New York, New York. eral Home for William F. DeLocal Man Honored by ber 16, 1874 later lived in New Donald
day
evening,
December 1, when
A former president of the National lehanty, of Yale avenue, 74, execNational
Investment
Jersey
and
then
was
in
the
inf
0 u r
Swarthmore,
elementary
Association of Real Estate Boards , utive secretary of the Chamber of
surance
business
in
Philadelphia
teachers
\vi])
discuss
various
areas
Group
the American Institute of Real Commerce of the City of Chester
for 25 years before retiring and of teaching reading.
Estate Appraisers and the Urban and Delaware County. who died
at 10 A.M. Tuesday while waiting
Riverview road resident Walter corning to live with Mr. and Mrs.
The Board approved final payLand Institute, and one of the
Sheppard
ten
years
ago.
His
wife.
fqr a bus at Yale avenue and A. Schmidt, senior partner of
ment of $1,625 to J. S. Cornell and
country's best known realtors , he
Chester road, a short distance Schmidl.--Poole, Roberts & Parke the former Bertha Freyburger, Son, the general contract on the
conducts an appraisal' and real from his home.
Philadelphia, has been nominated who accompanied him to Swarth- Rutgers avenue. school wing havestate counselor servi~e involving
Swarthmore policemen "Bill" as. the nert president of the In- more, died here in August, 1952. ing been fully completed.
varied questions which affect real
Surviving beside-' Mrs. Sheppard
Widner and Chief Bateman and vestment Bankers Association of
A schedule for use of the Rutestate decisions.
,America.
are
two
grandchildren:
Margaret
h
gers building was reviewed. The
t e Springfield Township ambulance crew worked a half hour to
Nominations, made by the (Mrs. Harold M.) McCorkel at policy for the present will permit
GarnetMeets Lansdowne revive him before he was pro- Board of Governors, are eonsider- Hummelstown a'nd Robert A. free use of the building to school
nounced dead by Dr. William y, cd tantamount to election in the Sheppard, Jr., of Dover, Del.; and parent groups up until 10 P.M.,
Thanksgiving Day Ri.al, of 215 Harvard avenue, I.B.A., which will act on the ticket four great-grandchildren Cath- the same as at the High School alThe thirtieth annual, Thanks- Swarthmore. His body was taken at its annual convention scheduled erine and Donald McCorkel and though it will necessitate some
giving Day football game between to his home at 200 Yale avenue.
for November 28-December 3 at Robert, ,2rd and Judith Louise extra expenditure by the Board
to cover janitorial services not
Swarthmore
and
Lansdowne . Mr. Delehanty was a native of the Hollywood Be a c h Hotel, Sheppard.
normally retained at the Rutgers
shapes up as one of the out- Boston, .-where 'his father, the late HOllywo~d, .Florida.
Arts Center Exhibit
I building
after daytime hours,
l'itandins games of the season.
Thomas F. Delehanty, was at one
Mr. Sc_'mlldt ht,.!:> devoted his en•
't
A
t
C
t
'
Nominal
charges
were set to cover
Last. year Lansdowne's victory time Immigration Commissioner. tire business career, almost 43
Th e C ummunl Y . r s en er In
.
moved them ahead in the series He attended school in that city years, to the securities business. Wallingford is presenting a guest expenses l.n the. case of other
standings with 14 wins and 3 tie'S and read law in various offices' He entered the investment field at Exhibition starting Sunday, No- groups \yhlch ~lIght be granted
as against Swarthmore's 13 wins. there, being admitted to !lie Mas- the age of 16 upon graduation vember 21, at 3 o'clock with the use of the. mulh-purpose room in
.
the new wmg.
The season record this year re- sachusetts bar in 1910.
I from high school in Hinsdale, works of three natIOnally
known
.
veals three victories for the
He became a draftsman for the Illinois, the town of his birth. The artists Morris Berd, Antonio MarProperty ChaIrman Samuel T.
"Lords," one tie and three losses Lake Submarine Torped~ Ship- Chicago office of White, Weld & tina, and Albert :(3. Serwazi. Tea Carpenter. reported the contract
with one game with Upper Chi- building ,Co. in Bridgeport, Conn., I Co., employed him as messenger will be served at the opening on for relocat~ng a manhole at Rut(Conhnued on Page 11)
chester to be played tomorrow,
during the First World War. and he advanced rapidly through Sunday to which members and
Swarthmore, being undefeated, Afterward he was tranSferred by various departments cashier, their guests will be invited, and
of course looks to comparative re- that firm to Chester and became statistical, and trading - to be- an opportunity will be offered to CONVERG~ ON LIBRARY
sulls with mutual opponents, AI- affiliated \vith the Chester Ship- come a member of the sales staff. meet these distinguished artists.
Tomorrow morning at 9:30 the
though Lansdowne lost to Yeadon building. Co., in charge of hull
After 10 years with White, Weld The hostess for the tea will be Swarthmore Public Library will
and Springfield, they decisively construchon.
& Co., Mr. Schmidt was, in 1922, Mrs. Jessie T. Vogdess of Media, be the objeclive of the Borough's
defeated Darby 40-0 and trounced
For a time thereafter he was in ,made manager of the bond de- and she will be assisted by Mrs. younger readers when the new
Sharon Hill and MedIa ... with the oil business and later became partment, Standard Trust and A. W. Woodward and Sally Wood- books exhibited during Children's
ward both of Moylan.
scores Il!-uch the same as the Gar- a ~·eal estate ~roker. He was ap(Continued on Page 12)
Book Week will go into circulaSerwazi who lives in Newtown tion.
~\ct's. Lansdowne, plagued with I pomted fie.ld secretary of the Del- I
studied at the Pennsylliljuries all season, will be at full
(Contmued on Page 12)
I Announce School Holiday Square
vania Academy of Fine Arts. He
Librarians Bettina Hunter· and
physical str,ength and will cerIn 'observance of the holiday has exhibited at the Metropolitan Mrs. Ross Thomson report a busy
tainly look to the Thanksgiving Association to Report
season, the Swarthmore Schools Museum in New York, The Phil a- week with above normal circula ...
Day clash to salvage their c a m - l O T
delphia Art. Museum, Carnegie 1n- tion of books and visitors to the
palgn.
eae ers
a arIes in all grades will close for the stitute in Pittsburgh, Golden Gate Book W~ek exhibit. Tuesday was
Thanksgiving vacation on WedSwarthmore, on the other hand,
A report on salaries paid to
Exposition,
San t~e. bUSiest day when morning
nesday noon, November 24 and International
will be seeking its fifth unde- teachers
in the swarthmore
VISits to the Library, by the Colwill reopen I for classes again on Francisco, California. He has
feated season since 1946.
schools will be given at the meetceived several awards including lIege Avenue Kindergarten, the
Monday, November 29 at the
the J. Henry Scheidt :Memorial fourth grade and a Brownie Troop
Seniors who will be playing ing of the Swarthmore Home and usual hour.
prize at the Academy of Fine Arts preceded the usual afternoon
their last game for the garnet School Association on Tuesday,
The
Thanksgiving
assembly
of
in
1941 for his painting the Red hours and the evening Book Week
and white are Co-captains Perry November 23, ~t ~ p.m. in the
the
Junior-Senior
High
School
Table Cloth. This canvas was Open House.
Dellmuth and Roger Zensen Carl high school auditorIUm.
TI
I
I'
Study will be held Wednesday morning, purchased by the Academy for its
Parents, teachers took advan.lomas, Stu Bowie, Preston'IiOI-1
The Teach ers S
a aries
tage of the evening to browse
lander, Ed Noyes, Randy Malin, committee, headed by W. New- in the school auditorium. This permanent collection.
through the new titles at leisure
JOhn Coleman, Manuel Hallier, ton Ryerson, has made a ~hOrough will be a musical program of unusual excellence, and will be in
Ma~ino, who studied at Penn- and ,to receive from Mrs. Ann
Steve Carter, Bud Stephani, Mike study of the probl.em. Otlier. c~m
charge of the music teachers, I sYlva~lla Museum School of In- Pennell of Bookways a list of sugHurd and Manager Dave Preston. mitlee members mclude WIlham
Bettejo Goodall and Robert M I dustrIal Art, the Graphic Sketch gested books for a child's home
They are sure to be missed as M. Bush, John W. Carroll, Do~
Holm, Following the assembly:
their play in the development of aid P. Jones, Myrtle G. McCalJin,
there will be a brief pep rally in lives In Newtown Square. Among list for library reading' separated
this Undefeated season has been Harry E. Oppenlander, George W,
the gymnasium in preparation for the man~ .museums in which he into age groups. Mrs. Pennell urgan inspiration to all who have I Patterson III, and John W. Sey- the annual Thanksgivin
Da has exhIbIted are the Whitney ed parents to read aloud to chil\Vatched them.
I bold.
The findings of the eom- game.
g
y Museum of New York and the
The game will take place at mittec will be presented by NewCorcoran Gallery, Washington, D. dren. She quoted Dr. Frank AydeLansdo,vne thOIS year.
ton Rycrson, John Seybold,
and
d I'd
'11
This annual football game with C. He is the recipient of many lottes' statement to the American
George Patterson, an SICS WI
Association for the Advancement
b used to illustrate the report, Lansdowne will be played Thanks- awards including the First Prize
of Science that "children of homes
STARTING LINEUP
at
DaVinci
ExhibItion,
and
the
e
h
'II
giving Day morning on the Lanscommittee
rneffi
ers
\VI
serve
SWarthmore
Lansdowne as a panel at the close of the downe lIeld. With kick-off time at First Altman Award at the Na- where there were plenty of books
to read and used f)ver and over
~ 57-Pappas
41_Wertz
cling to answer any questions. 10 a.m. Swarthmoreans desiring tional Academy of Design.
Berd, who graduated from the were the most likely college
G 37-!Iollander
55-LaRuche m~r William E. Arnold, director good seats should arrive early. The
material."
77-Bowie
35-Seltzer r the Educational Service Bur- morning on the Lansdowne lIeld. Museum School, and has painted
On display in complete repair
C 44-Zensen
47 stratton a
School of Education, Univer- With kick-off time at 10 a.m. and studied in Mexico, lives in
for
the IIrst time since the Library
~ 45-Thomas
4fl-Altemus ~~~' of pennsy~van.ia, will speak' Swarthmoreans desiring goo d Glen Riddle. His pictures appear
fire
were the Library"s original
60-Noyes
59-Pusey 'on the surveys his department seats should arrive early. The in the Barnes Foundation, the
t 53_Kroon
40-Ingram
made on the salary scale. Swarthmore band and cheerlead- PennsYlvania Aeademy, the Ly- illustrations for the Macrae-Smith
man Allison Museum, New Lon- edition of HeidI. Mrs. Howard
~~ ~2-Malin
28-Alden ha~:freshments will be served byers will be on hand to add color
private col- Sipler repaired the pictures, as a
,
tg 4--snYder
25--Jenzano the Eighth Grade m?thers at 7: 30 and life to what is expected to be don, and numerous
contribution to the Library.
lections.
in the cafetena ,
an excellent football game.
P8 52-Coleman
39--Jenkins
30-Dellmuth 45-McDougall p.m.
\,.e;~:nCi~:t~:~;lat~!' :~;~
I
THERE'S NO REASON TO WAIT-
CHRISTMAS
Union Wheels Grind
TDward Realization
EARLY DEADLINE
Thanksgiving Day Serl'ice will
be held 011 Thursday. November
25, at 10 a.m, at Trinity Episcopal Church,
, Ministers from the A.l\l.E.,
l\lethodist, and I'resbyterian
Omega Tau Rho Fraternity of
the National ASSOCIation ot: Real
Estate Boards prese'nted the uMan
of the Century" award to Philip
VI. Kniskern, 507 Riverview road,
:It a dinner on November 7 during the National Real Estate Con-
Walter A, Schmidt
Thanksgiving Day Service
The ann u a I
Community
Local Man Receives
• 'Man of Century'
Award
II
end cd and S \\' a rt h more
started to playas never before,
After their lirst attempts were
thwarted an out-of-bounds kick
by Dick Snyder put Yeadon on
their own 25. Three plays at their
line gained nothing for thc Eagles,
and this set the stage for one of
the most thrilling plays seen on
Rutgers Field. Dick Snyder received the Yeaaon punt and reversed to Cal Coleman, who
steamed through the sideline at
midfield, picking up three blocks
.THE SWARTHMOREAN
BUY
~TimORE:-FRilli~-;;m;;;;;;-~-;-;;~----------=======
,.
$3.50 PER YEAR
I
pc ri ad
•
YOLUl\IE
47 _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _-""SWAUTIIIIIORE, FRIDAY. NOVEl\I8ER 19, 1954_
_ _ _26-NUI\IBER
-:-_ _ _ _~~-;-,
I
for e ig h t y.ards and the t ouch down. Fullback Hummer and
Coleman speareaded this initial
drivc. Pete Kroon converted, and
Swarthmore led 7-0 at the quarter. This was not to last long as
Yeadon got rolling in' quick order.
Mixing passes with running,
flashy Boyd just seemed unstoppable. It was only four minutes till
the second quarter when Yeadon
had their firs! touchdown. Missing
an extra point, Swarthmore still
led 7-6.
,
November' 19, 1954
.
-
THE SWAR'DIMOREAN
. .
pqe 2
==='==a::=ii=~=a:=iii·
~
~
~on
·
.,-
Russell's Service
t
The B""'"
•
We're New
GUTHRIE-SMITH, INC.
Morton. Pa.
250 Yale Avenue
It's New.
1955 DODGE
t
. '
r
,.
.•
•
' •. Flashing ~"eQd with 183 Itor.epower •
• Flar.e-fashioned and alive wit.. beau'y •
,
:-r'".~.,,-
CHRIS.TMAS SHOPPING1
.. SHE'LLLOVE
to .
LUXURIOUS LlNGERlE
COLLEGE THEATRE
i.::~~~~~
·'ON
.
$500 MONTHLY
.
.
.
,
Starting salary for 2 ...ec:utJve.tyJWI
sa1e11!'eft to. np,..sent Iqrte Eadem
ffnoftdal
corporation.
ptanne
lounges offer o!,!ple opportunity .
fo< Ielsu.... · LOW 'wlnter ratfl.
'oa;Qn cwoter 'in all 60th•.
S,"aa
'.
''tiER TWELYEMIH'·
\IN.TECHNTCOlCJaI
No trav.l. Sales
of'.....
..... ..-..
WH•.•. Tlliirs'
_
,.
.. '
15 So,-tb Chester Road
,.
_,..,., II.... aill'(
.r;.tIoIIICe -_ .ablIlty ....,roil. .....
"'d..ti . . . ';.an "OkI. mclfw
,rIod, - " " " 01 _ . . , _ ' b l l .
.,.... I. ~""ft9 ....mew please
loci.... . """ _nol IoIsIooy Gil
,.,.. !ioIitRt••loi. 0... . . . . . . hCMi
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TH,"~FitONr.
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•••
. . . .t ·. • • •
"IITRAYED"
•
•
,
•
November 19, 1954
Georg~
Mr. Leslie W. Stout. president \ Hetzel of Thayer road.
.
\Thayer road. Mr. ";;d Mrs.
of
the
Rehoboth
Trust
com.panY.
The
maternal
grandparents
are
Morris of Troy. Pa.. are the paformerly of S.outh Chester. road.
3warthmore. Ittte!lded the golden and Mrs. Stout will spend ~he Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Hetzel of ternailVandparents.·
vedding annivqrsary' celebration
weekend with Mr. and Mrs. GrovMiss Barbara Kent of the Presi- of Mrs. van der Gncht·s parents. er C. Greene of SOflth Chester
01
\I
dential Apartments arrived home Dr. and Mrs. Robert Gray. life
Harlan Jessup.
of Mr. and
STATE INSPECTION PERIOD Encls Jan• 31
this week from a trip of three . long residents of Frankford. Philmonths in Europe.
adelphia. A small family dinner Mrs. Harlan R. Jessup of Haver·Have yaur IIISf"cteil now
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Amson of party on Sunday at the home of ford ave_nue. will spend ThanksWINTERIZE with PRESTON! or DREX
Vassar avenue will entertain Re't. the Gray's other daughter; Mrs. giving Day at Dartmouth Outing
and Mrs. Edwerth E. Korte of Vernon C. Hariman. and Mr. Club Lodge. Hanover. N.H.
· RO.ERT J. A1Z. OWll4lr
Gettysburg and Mr. and Mrs. Al~ Hartman, in Westfleld. lIT·J· preMrs. Robert Clothier of Colum: .
bert G"fnn at dinner Wednesday ced~d the actual· anniversa~y bia avenue entertained at a luncheon for 12 at the Ingleneuk on
evening. Rev. Korte is chaplain wh~ch feU on Wednesday.
. Auto Lite Jatte.rles
of Gettysburg College.
Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Wallace Tuesday in honor of her mother,
Wheel lalancing
Mr. and Mrs. Frank C. Pierson Henderson of Hopewelj.. N.J. visit- Mrs. Joseph A. Perry. and Mrs.
Dartmounth and Lclfayette Avenues
SW 6-0440
of o..gden avenue entertained Mrs. edthi~ past -week at iIIe home of Frank Borden of Germantown.
Pierson's sister, Mrs. Nathan Tufts Mrs. Henderson's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Borden was program speak- I •..,"""
of Pleasantville. N.Y. last week- Mrs. Harry E. Lockett of River- er for the day at the Woman's
Club.
.
end.
view road.
Mrs.
A.
rJI.
Bosshardt. of Park
Mr. and Mr.. William E. Soden
Mr. and Mrs. John de Moll of
avenue,
returned,last
week from a
of . College avenue entertained Harvard avenue returned Thurs,
Colonel and Mrs. Walter Layer of day from a trip to 'New England week's visit with two of her sons~
Arlington, Va .• formerly of Ridley where they visited. friends in Rene. who with his familY was
transferred bat:k to Long Island
Park, over the weekend. Mr. and Massachusetts and Connecticut.
BEAUTY SALON
:NIrs: . Soden and their guests atMr. and Mrs. John W. Nason of recently from the West Coast.
BEAUTY GRACES THE FESTIVE BOARD
te.nded . tte Penn-Notre Dame Walnut lane visited their son. where he had been flying an airlift
to
the
Phillipines
and
Japan
football game on Saturday.
Chuck. at Phillip Exeter Academy
9 South Cherier Road
Mr. and Mrs. Wi11iam F. Single- in Exeter. N.H .• Chuck is a senior during the Korean war; and Richard, who, with his new bride,
Call SWarthmore 6-047.6
ton of Chestnut avenue entertaln- at the academy. ..
occupies av apartment In New<;p at dinner on Sunday evening, Lois Anita Storlazzi. freshman port, R.I., in-between maneuvers
at Beaver College, is a member of
Mr. and Mrs. Cornelius Kruse
. a destroyer. On her way back.
New York O;:ity. MJ:. Kruse spoke
1954 undefeated hockey team.
Mrs. Bosshardt stopped over with
at the Meeting House on Sunday Lois, dal1ghter; of Dr. and Mrs.
J. Storlazzi. plays left friends in New York.
evening.
Lt. John Snape. son of Mr. and I hl.l~ba,'k on the tel.m.
ENGAGEMENTS
Mrs. J_ Roy Smipe of Harvard
avenue. is stationed at Lackland
Mr. and Mrs. J .. Wellford MarMrs. Milton How¥d' Fussell. Jr.
Air' Force ~ase in San AntoniO, tin ot. Crestwood, N.'V. were visi- of Vassar avenue announces the
Texas. -where he is awaiting fur- tors at the home of Mr. and Mrs. engagement of her daughter Miss
ther assignment.
.
R. Blair Price of North Chester Anna Mary Fussell to Mr. Eb~n
~rs .. Henrietta Bruce of Magill road during the past' week. Mrs. Caldwell Lang. son of Mr. and
road is entertaining' on Monday Martin is Mrs. Prlce;s sister.
. ':": '. -,'
~rs. Frederick Robert Lang of
night in honor of Mr. and Mrs.
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Banks of Maple avenue.
Roy J. McCorkel and family who Harvard avenue will have as their
Miss Fussell was graduate~
will be leaving for New Delhi on guests over the weekend. their from the. University of Pennsylthe .26th of November.
nephews, Andy Mitten of Evans- vania w,here she was a member of
Mr. and Mrs. Courtney Smith of ton,. 111.. who attends Penn State. Alpha Chi Omega.
Cedar lane entertained on Wed- and Dick Mitten of Freemont.
Mr. Lang who served as a ~ieu
nesday evening for the Philadel- Neb.. who attends Westminster tenant in the Army is a graduate
phia Alumnae of Swarthmore Choir College.,Jn Princeton. Also of Cornell University where he
••
College at a bridge party and tea. visiting the Banks over the week- w.as a member of Dell;l Phi FraMr. and Mrs. Maurice L. Web- end. yilll be, fat Sullivan of '1'0- ternity.
.ster, Jr" of Elm avenue are enter- \yan~a;' ¥r. Dav~d Turner and son.
taining at an open house on Sun- D~ve. Jr .• of Towanda; and Vic
Mr. alld Mrs. W. Alexander
and
day. November 21. In honor of Mr.
of. Towanda. 'j'he Banks will Hipple of Merchantville
-:0
t· "
and Mrs.. Roy J. McCorkel of Coran open h01i.e following the OC811n City. N.J .•. have lIJll10unced
,
nell avenue.
•
hi!llt school iootball game.
tlie engagemept of their daughter.
Mr. and Mrs. A. David Speers of
Mr. and Mrs. Minor Stein of Ruth Alexander. to Mr. Richard
Yale avenue had as their weekplace had as their W!lUam Banks. son of. Mr. and
end guest;s,. Mr. Speer's brothe~~ guest for four days. Mrs, Minor's Mrs: Rudolph H. Banks of Com.ell
in-law and sister. Mr. and Mrs. mother. Mrs. Harley N. Shipman avenue.
Miss Hipple was graduated from
James Cunning. Jr.. of Indla- of Sunbury. Pa.
'
Burlington
County Hospital as a
napolis. On Tuesday the two
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Reed of
.
couples went to New' York for North Chester road have had as medical technician.
Mr. Banks is a graduate of Havfour. days.
their guest for the past two weeks.
Mr. Martin Boyke" of Stade. Mrs. Reed'~ mother, Mrs. C. De- erford School and the Uni,(ersitY
of Pelmsylv'anla.
Germany was the overnight guest catur Derby. of Lansdowne.
A spring wedding is planned.
of Mr. and Mrs. Steven Spencer
Mrs. R. H. Hammond of Louisof Ogden avenue last week. Mr villeis visiting her son-in"law and
I BIRTH
Boyken. en route from' Washing~ daughter, Mr: and Mrs. W. C.
.--' .:
Mr. and Mrs. W. Thomas Morris
ton to New York. was a teacher Rowlimd of College avenue. She
•
n
of
Sayre.
Pa
.•
announce
the
birth
in a school in Germany attended will b'e in Swarthmore until after
of. -a. daughter, Joan Dixson, on
by Klaus Lange. a summer guest Christmas.
.
of the Spencer's four years ago.
Jlml,Dy Robinson. son of Mr. Sunday. November 14.
Mrs.
Morris
is
the
former
Dixie
Mrs. William H. Driehaus of and Mrs: Ford F. Robinson of
Yale Avenue is entertaining with Guernsey road will go to Unlona tea on Monday. November 22.
ville, Fa .•. this weekend'
visit
Mr. and Mrs. John W. Nason of Fritz and Holmes Jusk~n" sons of MRS. LLOYD E. KAUFFMAN
SIS-Dartmooth Avenne
Walnut lane attended a 'dinner for Mr; and Mrs. F. C. Jussen. former- SwaMI.more 6-208.0
the Queen Mother at the Waldorf Iy of Cornell av"nue.
Astoria on November 3. The diriMr. and Mrs. Russell Heath SlJDSCRIPTIONS
FOR ALL
,
ner was sponsored by the English and' their daughter. Barbara. of !Ii1\~AztNES
Speaking Union.
Cedar lane are attendinll the
Order Now for Christmas
Mrs. J.' W. Howard Schad of
- PrincetonI . game on
.
Riverview road had as her house Saturday: They WIll entertain Pay In January
guest this past weekend. Mrs. their son, Sandy. who is a junior
Philip L. C. Fischer of Baltimore. at- Dartmouth and a . group of his
SHORTIES NYLON NIGHTIES
Mrs. N. R. Joslyn of Arlington. friends for 'luncheon before the
Mass., w!ll be spending the winter game.
Swartlimore~ .Pa.
with her son"in-Iaw arid daughter. - - , - - - - - - - - - - - - AIR CONDITIONED
SLIPS
,.-,,"I"'IJ'T.-·"
Mr. and Mrs. Charles B. Shaw of ON lilt BOARDWALK AT ATLANne, em
Ogden avenue.
FrldCiy '& Saturday
Mr. and Mrs. John Cheeseboraarfes Dlc••as· loyflll Masterpiece
HALF-SLIPS
ough. of Biltmore, N.C., will be
"tHE piCKWICK PAPiERS"
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Robert H.
Panmh Map.. rated It .XC.IIHt
p1a-s ci ter,.1fIic ·ca~"h.acled by hotaaa's
Reed of College avenue over the
leadhuJ actor, Nlgel patrlct;· "
SKI PAJAMAS
Thanksgiving holiday and weekend_ Wh"jle here the CheeseborBig Kart-oon Karn1vGl for Klddles Sat.
oughs will attend the Army-Navy
1 P.M. plas comed, Gad 'Trader To"
BRUNCH COATS
football game with the Reeds.
of th" C...a Secis· sekal.
HOUSE COATS
Why nQt plal'\
vOCOMr. .and Mrs. Fernand van der
tion fo< the ...L.'..' '/n"nll' at
sAT. NIGHT ONLY-FIATURES ",'0
Gracht .ind son Fernand. ·Jr•• o~,
the
se
Day
Sun•• MOil., .. Tues.
Rose Valley road. Rose
a bountiful turkey
traditional ~ o~ our c...ts.
Shopping Made Easy at
Even! nOs ..111 be' goy
Personals
.'
THE SWARTHMOREAN
. THE
SW
ARTHMO
I'!:BLISHED
EVERY
FRID
PETERE. T9 • MAR1::mATOTSWARTHMORE. PA.
LD
Phone
SWat1h
LD. PUBLISHERS
REAN
:
TRINITY NOTES
Dr. and Mrs. 'Joseph Sloriazzi
Holy Communion will be cele- and family of Park avenue will Thanksgiving holidays with Mrs
brated at· 8 o'clock Sunejay mom- attend a family reunion over the
parents. Mr. and Mrs:
::~==~-:!~~~~~IIl~or~e~6'~O~90~OC::::~_
~~!~= :~I:or:ie:~I.~.
!~~~:I~:n~P :';:n'::.,,:t:~;y~:U::~
oly Baptism will be held at 11
o·clock.
. as ushers will be:
A Tho se servmg
SWARTHMORE. PENNA.
---SiiVAoom~ii~~~~~ES~D~A~Y~N~O~O~N
!. -P;tE;i;niiru~itro;y;iS~~~'~N:o~v~e~m~be~r~'1~9~.~1~9:5t~-===_11
PRESBYTERIAN NO
TES
7th. 8th, and 9th
.TWO morning Worship Services dially invited to cograd";hare corWIll be held on Sunday morning Adults will meet f:e'Bt' e Young
at 9:3!) and 11 o'clock "Let U . at 6:30 Mr B- h
ble Study
_ Mr.
Give BlShop's will
be
topic
leader.'
b:.iIl
bedthe
sermon
6:
45 andSup;er
th
serve
at
Church School CI;sses will be at 8. Dr.
th~
o~
l~i~r
;'::'';:'::SamFu':!~ be~n
.~h~ ~enior
~ngs
~unday
P~OlldUCed.s~own.
~.
Pierr~
~ervice.
~ollow
b~rhood
a~
~50
superll~tende~ts.
d~y
__"::=:::::===-:::::::=-.::~:
wll~
9:3~
=
iii
SUPPLIES
~
~nd
uI
~
-A
r:'I I I I I I'I I I 'I I I I I I I I 'I I'I I I I I'I I'il l l,~t~
Th~nla;giving
.:!.AM
.,.",.
.
DELIVERY SCHEDULE'·
FOR .THANKSGIVING WEEK'
de~iveries
TFHURSDAY.
will be made TUESDAY.
RIDAY derove"es will be made MONDAY
WEDNESDAY d
•
N·
eliveries will be made WEDNESDAY
a pick-ups except emergencie d ' g Th k
.•
e are fan
or sgiving
Thanksgiving'
Rugsdelivery.
may be picked up the wee
S k 'b,nf
Week.
.~ To avoid disappoinfment:
'
I. Please allow at least one w k'
.
rugs from storage.
ee s notoce for removal of
2. Please do not ask us t d '
f
3. To help us mainta·
0
eh,ate rom 6ur schedule. '
structed not to
our drivers are in- .
ments have bee
d'
d e Ivery un ess arrange4. Please be at homnemwaheen on a vance with o.ur office.
7~1~
~
~:~o"Jat~iMlnietnisterer
/
,~
=
R
OGER RUSSELL !
ii
~
ons
Idren's Fund. Mrs. Jacohs
n Tuesday evening Nov~mber as usual on Monday and Wednes. was for several years employed 30, there will be a
- th
at 4 o'clock for. the hoys 5
as an
ecutive of the fund. Sup- whio!"en's Association Roo:::
0 clock Monday for the girls
per Wl . be at 6: 30 and the pro- w ch John McKoy. executive di- 7: 30 p,m. for the Men's and Boys'
gram Wlll
at 7.
rector of the Robert Wade Neigh- Choir.
.The Jumor High Fellowship
House. and Mr. Bishop
The mid-week service of H i
Wlll meet at 6: 30. After supper WIll speak and answer questions Communion will be held at
at 7. the choir will rehearse. prio; about the work. of this settlement Wednesday morning.
to a program of faith
house Any Int
t
At 8
and f u n . '
eres ed members
o'clock Thursday morning
All of our young people in the of the congregation are invited Thanksgiving Day, there will be
Ito come. . .
celebration of the HoI C
II:
S
.
CHUR'CH S"'RVICES
The.Community
Th'ank sg'lVlng.
mwu' on. and 10 a.m. the Communy. omPRESBYTERIAN CHURCH
ervlCe this year will be held in Ity
Service will be
Jo h P
the Trinity Episcopal Church on held at the Trinity Church.
Johns'Wchoti.
Thanksgiving
Day.John
November
at
10 a.m. Dr.
Moore 25
of .A service of Evening Prayer
Sunday. November 21
Sw.arthmore College and 'the
be held I1t 5:30 Tuesday and
9:30-10:45-11:00
A.M. _ Church F nends Meeting. will give the agam on FrIday
at th e same hour.
SchooL
'.
~Ixl
Formerly
=_5
PIOURE FRAMING
PORTRAIT STUDIO
PHOTOGRAPHIC
Darnel.
J. P.Harrar.
Espenschade
C
CAR N S
Giles,. B.
and' FW
.. W:
Ii
LuehrlOg. William Morrison will
S
Baltimore Pike
_5-=!il
be acolyte at the 8 o'c1ock service
prlngfield. Del. Co., Pa.
State & Monroe'Sts.
and Wayne. Kinyon and
SWartilmore '.04S0!il
Media .'
=
Decrouez will serve at 11 During _
Op .. 8 A..... to 6 P......
=EME L2176
. Open i=
the
o'clock
Tay'lorb BarUFrl. E
nett 11and
Ann Hay will
.. 1llIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIiiiiiiiiilllUlllllllllllllllllllUlil
charge of the nursery.
em.
1IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIDllllllllllliiDlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIUIDlIli
EI'~copal
me~ting
lorist
Gra~.
~~ .~rogram
wes~naven~:'
DiLuzio'
and
SOils
~
F
_.' W. alternate;
Kitts. head
F M:
R
J. E.usher'
Beli. R:
held as usual at 9: 30, 10: 45 and talk on the United NationsII WlII .From 3 to 10 p.m. Sunday the
11 a.m.: The .Men's Bible Class, The Board of Deacons wiil m t DIOcesan 'Area Teachers' Training
andtthe)women's Bible Class will ion Tuesday evening. November
will be held at the Trinmee at 9: 30 a.m.
at the home of Mr
d M •.1 Y Church. This is one of 15
High FeUowship Schott. IS Benjamin
::;-ea meetings being held in the
"',1
egl~,
a series of three eve?n Monday. November 22 th~
ac~e to helpandtrain
teachers.
this
evening on Fnendly Open House will :neet
departmental
The World .. Children." A film at 2 o'c1ock.
. ' supervIsors m using the first of
by the United Nations
The Girl Scouts meet on Mon- thi eulnew
Church's curWI be
Following this day -at 3:30 and 5.
r c urn. wWch will be in use
Philip Jacob will lead a
On Tuesday. November 23 the next faU.
.'
Ii
Chi about the United Na- Chancel
O
.
di. scussion
Choir will'.ehe·
arse '
. Choir rehearsals wl'll be held
I
~toGrlaZZi'S
. . Gl~ncol! of Carlisle, Pa.
~"umllmlllllllllllllnln"llllmla"llft_
ing. At 9: 30. children in the 3rd
Rosalie Peirsol
Entered as Second Class M
. Imon Sally Alden
Office at Swarthmore Pa atter. January 24 1929
. DEADLINE-WEDN
• . • under the Act 0'f March
,at the
Post
3. 1870.
~haks"
PI!p3
ask us to make
sp;:adu~u~~ :t~ei:
Y rutS ~"!'
"call-backs~Th
I .V C '.
",At"""'"
C-~'"
~:-'
'"
•
.
• -A
,AU
• '-'''''. ."'"
t..
H .........- . . ••
.
expected. Do 'not
an sglvlng Week.
.
AI...
,.....
~ve.,
m_. - - - . . . . .
- , -100
- . ..
. ,lit --- Swuttvn-.
- -
,..
,T.,
......
.
..-
and 11 A.M.-Mr. Bishoo serm.on. All members of the com- CHRISTIAN SCIENCE' NOTES
SWarthmore 6·6000
.
will preach. Ser,\!on topic' . munlty. are' cordially invited to
"Let 'Us Give
.
attend this service.
How the spiritually correct view
Weme
•• .'_2
9:30
A.M•.-.BM.bl
en's
Class and
of God and man destroys anxiety
$0n s 1 e Class
•
METH
d
-"'"'" . . . . . .
6:30 P.M.-Young Ad";Us
NOTES
an brought
restoresout
peace
'of mind Sciwill 111111
High Group
Christmas ODIST
will
made
real fo'r be
at Christian
th ch'ldr
ence services this Sunday in the
.
O
'
6.:30 P.M.-Junior ,Hl'gh Fellow- b eth 1 en In Gwendollne Nar- Lesso n- S ermon entitled SOUL
ship.
-.
.e s mission llome in Constan- AND BODY.
Scri!'tural selections include the
tine. Algeria. North. Afric.... beMETHODIST CHURCH
••••
~ollowtng.·
froni" Psahns (42: 11):
John C. Kulp
cause children and adults of the
Minister
Sunday School will give thean- 'Why art thou cast down. 0 my
Rudolph H. Hodge
nual offering for this purpose. on so.ul ~ and why art thou disquieted
PREVENTION SERVlCr...;..
Assistant Minister
Sunday at the 9: 45 a.m. Church Wlthm lJle? I)~pe thou in God:
Does save time and Inconvenience.
•
•
School session. Classes meet for for I shall yet praise him. who is
Mrs. Ruth G. Nicely
Organist-Director of Music
all ages beginning at two years. the health of my countenance
and my God." .
'
Sunday. November 21
Th t
9:4~ A.M.--Church
School
B ~ld eachel' for the Young Aduit
~OOD .VISIONThe public is cordially invited
11:00 A.~.-The Rev. John C. Ul ers Class will be William C.
to attend the. services at 11 a
Does your windshield wiper wipe clean?
Kulp will preach. Sermon topic' Collenberg. Church Lay Leader.
First
Church of Christ. scienti~:
HThanks be to God."
.
Morning Worship and the cere7:00 P.M. _ youth tellowship mony for the reception of new Park avenue, Swarthmore
EXHAUST SYSTEMwill meet.
members .will be eonducted at 11
--'------. \
TRINITY CHURCH
a.m. when the pa.,tor. Rev. John FRIENDS MEETING NOTES
=;j:~ber, Yfou drlivekywith windows closed; carb';n
H. L~wrence Whittemore. Rector C. Kulp. preaches on the theme
Henry' Cadbury will continue
umes rom ea. exhaust co n. b e d angerous.
Sunday. November 21
"Thanks Be To God." The com~
the Adult Forum .series on the
8:00 A.M.-Holy Communion
bined choirs will. sIng the hymn- Gospels with a dis~ussionof the
9:30 A.M.-Church School (3rd anthem. "Prayer. of ThanksgivTIRES and WHEEL ALiGNMENT,
ing." arranged by Scholin. Louis Gosp:1 of Luke next Sunday
1 grade and up.)
mormng
.
at
9:45
in
the
lecture
1:.00 A.M.-Morning Prayer and E. Rowley. Swarthmore College
T" stop on wintry roads you must have traction.
room of the Martin Laboratory
Holy
Baptism.
II:OO A.M.-Church School (2nd sophomore. will be organ accom- Building.
.
,
grad~ and down..
panist as Mrs. Daniel Nicely
Monthly Meeting for Business
ANTI· FREEZE
Tnesday. November 23
directs. A coffee hour after the
at
7:
30
p.m.
on
Sunwill
be
held
5:30 P.M.-·Evening Prayer.
service will be prepared by the
Just puttin 9 •In A nrI· Freeze is not enough' cooling syst
Wednesday. November 24
Woman's Society of Christian day, . Because. of unexpected dehau Id b e checked.
s
•
'.
ems
7:15 A.M.-Holy Communiori.
Service in cooperation with the lays m the remodelling of Whittier
.
Thanksgiving Day
Commission on,-Membership and !youse it will be held in the Meet8:00 A.M.-Holy Communion.
Evangelism in honor of those new 109 House i,\stead of Whittier
WINTER LU.R.ICATION.:....
10.00 A.M.-Community Service. mem.bers received into the fellow- House, as previously announced:
FrIday. November 26
ship of the church.
The High School Fellowship
Don't make your car work against stiff 0',1 a
'
nd
grease.
__
.=__
Methodist
youth
Fellowship
for
now
known' as the United Fel~
E~P.M.-·Evening Player.
teenagers meets at 7 p.m. at the ~owship Students. wili go to MeetTHE RELIGIOUS- SOCIETY
OF FRIENDS
church with a social hour follow- mg. at Westtown. School, Sunday
ARE YOU ONE OF THE.3 PERCENT WHO
Sunday. November 21
ing at the home of June Holt. 911 m~ming. On Sund'!y evening they
9'
.45 A,M.-Adult
I
Wlll meet .at the home of Pam
meet
in M t. Lee Forum
R' will Mt. Ha Iy0 k e pace.
HAS TAKEN CARE OF HIS CAR?
9'.45 A.M.-First
ar m Day
toreSchool
oom.In
The pastor's ollice hours for Foster. 223 South Chester road. at
1i ~e Meeting House.
personal counseling are on Tues- 7 p.m. Mrs. Philip Jacob will
~~ A.M.-Meeting for Worship. day from 4 to 5 p.m. and 7 to speak to .them about the United
State I.'pectloll Started NovemHr
..'
.. ,
7'00 e welcome to join with us. 8 p.m. Other hours by appoint- Nations.
.M. - ' UnitM Fellowship ment
S· tudents
M t·
•
f4nOtnhthly
M":ei::'~
for
Business
Cottage
Prayer
Meeting
~ll be
at the home
of Dr.
and ·Mrs.
N. Community Christmas Sing
e Meeting House.
All :onday•. November 22
Martin Kapp. 345 Cornell avenue
A Community Christmas SIng
lV~ sewIng for A. F. S. C. on Tuesday evening at 8 p.m. Dr. and Tree LIghting will be held
Garold W. Thumm, department of early this year. It·s not too early
All d esday. November 24
Th ay sewing for A.F.S.C.
political Science. University of to reserve a spot In your date
ConunllrIIday. November 25 .
Is the leader. The book for FrIday. December 10 at
_ice at = t y
Serv- memory verse this week is Ph!llp- 7: 30 p.m. for this event. which is
FIRST CHURCH OF
pians 4: 6.7.
sponsored by the Swartfunore
CHRIST, SCIENTIST
Boy Scout TrOOP.3 meets In the Business Association: The place:
p
. SWARTHMORE
social hall at 7 p.m.
Borough Hall parking lol Par"
.ark Avenue belo", Harvard
On Thursday at 10 a.m. the an- ticipants: High School Chorus and
II'oo ~. NeveJiober :41
nual community Thanksgiving Glee Club. choirs of the MethOdist,
Yale Ave. & S. Chester Rd.
l1:oo A'MM.-Sunday School.
Service is conducted at Trinity Presbyterian, and Wesley A.M.E.
~ ';So~"ant;r"'~~rmon Episcopal Church With ministers Churches, the S~ore' CoIof the village participating.
lege· Choir. and a brass instru_-----:-'-- .
meptal group, all under the c\In!e. I
SWarthmore-, .6", 1250Mr. and Mrs. L. A. \\Tetlaufer of tion of ~-Jo GOodall ~
to il Sl1cath Haven avenue will enter: one is w~me. See December a
,\ .
tsin at an open house on SaturdaY issu'e'of The ~ for
afternoon;
.--
Th~ks"
Blbl~
6;~p~.M.-senior
Fellow~
(JJ. ,
4'H~
1II11II1II11II1I1II1I1II~illilllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllnlllllllllDllIIIIIIOUIIIIU'
b~
Do You Know
-
?
.
•
.
•
"rsf
'P
~~r.ving
HANNUM, & WAtTE
.
\
.
•
November 19, 1954
November 19, 1954
THE SWARmMOREAN
P~lJe 4
'.
Armstrong, Jr., of Green Valley A. PeirsoI, Jr., of Lafayette ave- I Woman's Club Notes
NeWS NOTES
road, Wallingford.
nue. Lat(\r she plans· to go to
The American Home DepartMr. and Mrs. Louis Lusky and . Mrs. John M. Pearson of Cor- Dayton, Ohio for the Christmas ment, of which Mrs. Charles H ..
holidays Ilt the new' home or her
children, Mary and John, of nell avenue had as her guests'this son and daughter-In-law, Mr. and Zensen is chairman, will hold an
Louisville, Ky., were weekend past weekend, her brother and Mrs. James M. Dryden, 336 orga(1lzation meeUng Monday,
November 22, at 10 a.m. at the
guests of Mrs. Lusky's parents, sister-In-law, Mr. and Mrs. James Springbrook boulevard.
club 110use.
Rev. and Mrs. C. A. Anderson' of R. Davie of Albany, N.Y. Mrs.
The meeting of the Music
~19UIST CARDS
Yale avenue.
Pearson entertained' at a dinner
Group,
scheduled 'for Tuesday,
The Emergency Aid of Phila. Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Paul of Park party having as her guests, Mr.
November
23, at 10 ~.m. has been
and Mrs. Davie, Mrs. William A. delphia .is asking the aid of peravenue entertained Mrs. Charles
.
DeCaindry, and her daughter, sons In neighborhocid areas In cancelled.
J. Paul lIPd Miss Clara J. GoettAt
2
p.m.
Tuesday
Mrs.
Rae V .
Murray.
colle~Ung playing cards. These
ling of Baltimore, Md., and Nancy Mrs. Peter
•
Biester, superintendent of the U.
Paul Barnes of Albuquerque, N.
Mrs. Alexander M. Dryden, for- cards wIll be brai11ed and dis- S. . Mint in Philadelphia, will
.
M. last weekend.
merly of Swarthmore, arrived tributed to blinded veterans.
speak on "Making' Money ~ a
Sunday from her home in BarneAny deeks which are collected Fascinating Buslnes.!;'
Mrs. Noel Armstrong, Sr., of gat, N.J., to spend the Thanksgiv- may be dropped iilto a container
Newburgh, N.Y. will arrive (odllY ing season with her son-In-law set up for that purpoSE! in the
to spend the Thanksgiving holi- and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Henry Swarthmore Bank.
"I saw it in The Swarthmorean."
days with Mr. and Mrs. Noel
.
~-------..~~--
..
You don't
have far to
look when, you
•
Honon Volunteer Worker
On Monday night, November 8,
~rs. W. S. Satterthwaite of North
Chester road was honored with
other volunteer workers by Gener:at Victor A. Conrad of Fort
Monmouth, N.J. at their "Appreciatjon Night" for volunteer service corps who have served the 1st
Army Command. Mrs. Satterthwaite was a former USO director
of Union County, N.J. The group
which she was most closely identified with, the Summit YWCA, received a 10 year plaque.
Elect Bishop Member
Of Wils91i1 Board
Members of the Mother's. Club
were told that sixth graders are
far better readers than adults in
a talk gben by' Mrs. Mildred
Brain at the monthly me.eting of
the club Thursday, ~ovember 4,
in McCahan Hall:
, Mrs. Brain, of the Spring mll
Country Day School In Wallingford, claims iliat 'modern educational metbo" are far superior to
old. teaching methods by which
adults have learned "The First
R." Current methods of teaching
readlnl: require the recognition of
enUre words rather than the individual syllables making up each
word. More rapid reading and
much greater understanding are
significant advaniages of this new
method .
. The ability to read well at the
first grade level forms an important base for future studY, Mrs.
Brain ,stated as an example that
suCcess In college algebra depends
on reading habits acquired in the
.
first gradl!.
Primary reading instruction depends. on the readiness of the
child to assimilate this n:todern
method. Not all children are ready
to ~d at the age of six and instruction should not lie stsrted
until a child gives evidence of
reading readiness, Mrs. Brain be..
'
lieves•
. .An important factor of the development of the ability. to read
is ap.arent'.. faith in.. the child.
Express confll'Jerice, in your child's
ability, said Mrs. Brain and your
child will progress more rapidly.
Mrs. Richard Farrington, chairman of the bridge cIasses, announced/ ~at classes ~ll begin in
January.
.
Hours and dollars
are particularly. predou$ at Chri!'tm~s
.
time. You can get the greatest retl,lrn fqr y0/,lrs by doing yOl,Jr
Christmas Shopping in your own
home town.
.
.
You save money because your home town merchQnts, not
,
•
prices, .
When you shop in your home ,town, you help to keep the
com~Uriity economically stable.
,
•
FurthE!rm ore , modern distribution methods give home town
mer~hqntj; the Same wide variety of high-quality merchandise
that is offered elsewhere.
.
-."
at
Stretch 'Your lime and
.'
...
..
.
,.
,
.
.
.
•
.UTIUTY SH.OP
•
t,r,
""I
~ .. ,~ r,"·~
.
~OYC' ~~IS
Two Oberlin students from
Swart~ore . will be hostesses to
speake!,s at sessions of. the threeday Woman's Career Conference
at Oberlin College, November 1719.
'Alexandra I Bowie,' daughter of
Dr. and Mrs. Morris Bowie of
South . Chester road; will be
hostess to the speaker at a session on Journalism. Sandy is a
senior government majQr in tI1~
college of Arts and Sciences an
I·_',.-~- to go !nt~ p.ithet teaching
or government work.' Sbe is editor in chief
the Review, tI1~
bi-weekly college newspaper, ?"
a member of the Musical UIIlOll·
• Mary Decrouez, daughter of )!r.
and Mr.!. Plene Decrw~ of og~
den avenue, will be hosteSS t
the spe~~er at Ii sessiop. on Lib~
Sole"",,; Mar,Y, a senior majo t\1e
in hiatory, Is. a mem~ '~AIIW'
Union,
CosmnOl""',-Osklell'
of
.
Mq,-LYHQCK $ItOP
~.
.. "
president of the Rocke J
r nstitule for Medi~al Research.
.
D B
ronk's address will be
gIVen at 8: 15
Frld
Dr.. Bronk Will Give Main
Han
ay f In
Address' .of Week-End ence,
dinner:
g a con erDr B
Conference
A B . d ronk, who received his
. . degree from Swarthmore,
29
d
,.
The fall meeUng of the Penn- was ean of men t"ere from 192'7of psychology
an also servlid
and biophysics
as a professor
He
sylvania Conference of College wa di
.
s
rector of the Eldridge
Physics Teach~rli, which will
con.
vene and
at Saturday,
Swarthmore
College
for
Friday.
Novem.
ber Reev.es
M.tedlcal Johnson
Physic. Foundation
at ,the Unl'ver19 and 20, will hear as its prin-I ~ y of Pennsylvania from 1929
cipal speaker Dr. Detlev W d rough 1949 and has been presi_ _ _ _....:...'_:-___
M~rtin
~
....
~
.~
~
.
.....
......,.
-
fOll:~'::;
Scie~ce.
since 1950. Dr. Bronk I registraUon and the presentation
was president of Johns Hopkins .of papers by parVcipaUng proUniversity from 1948 to 1953 fessors. Saturday morning, there
when he joined the' Rockefeller
Institute.
According to William C. Etmore, chairman of the department of physics at Swarthmore,
the conference is sponsored by
the western, central, and southe~stern
Pennsylvania sectiens of
llie American Association of
Physics Teachers. All college phy-
I
sics
instructors
Pennsylvari,ta,
as well
as their in
advanced
pupilS,
have been invited to attend.
The meeting will open Friday
with
=.:._~..:.._~e~n~t~o~f~t~h:e~N~a~ti~.o~n~a~I~A~c:a~d~e~m,:y~Of~a~ft~e:rn~o~p~n~i~n~T~r~ot~t=er~H~al~1
,-
(
will be an address by Dr. Martin
A. Pomerantz,of the Bartol Research Foundation,. on "Physics
in India Today: 'Teaching and itesearch."
Dr. William E. Stephens of the
University of Pennsylvania, will
discuss the University's new physical science buildirig.' Following
luncheon at Houston Hall at the
Ppe 5
JUNIOR ASSIMIL.IIS
The 7th and 9th Grades will
hold their
nd d
f th
seeo
0
e
season at the Woman s Club on
Saturday, November 20.
Mr. and Mrs. John Seybold are
host and hostess of the 7th Grade
and will be IISSts'ted as chapero.neil
by Mr,. and Mrs. G. Alec Mllls.
Host and hostess of the 9th
Grade are Mr. and Mrs. W.W.
Watkins who will be assisted by
I
~ce
.
University,
thea conference
will Mr.
NewtonCalhoun.
Ryer and
conclude with
Saturday afterDr. and
and -Mrs.
Mrs. W.
J. Alfred
noon tour of that new physics
as t ron 0 my, and
building.
"I Saw it In The Swarthmorean."
mathematic~
..
\
-
Chrysler New Yorker Deluxe SI. Regis
,
.
,
.
was
or
1'"
'/;.',/
ANNOUNCING CHRYSLER~R955
WITH THE100-MlllION-DO~LAR LOOk
1
,
_
:"'~
•
_
."
"
~. ~"
'.'~
J \
'
i
.~
"
"
\1'-.,
,
IT's HAPPENED! Here's a wholly new direction in automotive styling for all cars to
Name Hostesses
CATHERMAN'S, MICHAEL'S
CAMERA· &' HOBBY SHOP·
SHERWIN'S, . ~uc~M~~'S
CI1'l-DR'N'~ 5t,10"
•
,
,'
Counsels Mothers
On Reading' Methods
wart mo,re
having to pay high metropolitan rents, can afford to sell at low
:,.
The . Rev. Joseph P. Bishop,
minister Of the swarthinore Presbyterian Church, was recl!I)tly
elected a member of th~BOard
of ' Trustees of' Wilson Co lege.
Mr. Bishop, who spent
early
childhood in Mercersburg, has
been' a guest minister at Wilson
Coriege~ He is a member of the
Board of the Ro~'Wade Neighborhood House In Chester and
this year is serving as a member
of the budget review committee
of the Philadelphia Coriununity
Chest.
He takes an active Interest in
the Delaware Coun.ty Health and
Welfare Council and the .... Delaware County Branch of the Philadelphia Child Guidance Clnilc.
./
In
-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~E~S~W~AR~~~~O~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
COBege Phy'Sics
!~~'I
Teachers. Meet Here
.. I . r..
. "'f
/
follow. And it took Chrysler for 1955 to
do it: America's top performer and the
first in the coming generation of motorcarsl
Come see itl Everything about it is completely new, and dramatica1!y. different.
Here's the car with the lOO_Milhon-DoIlar
Look •.. and when you ~w.n it ~d drive
it you'll feel like every mtlhon of It!
c'hrysler for 1955 is long and sinewy and
low. It's a sleek, elean length of steel t~t
looks as if it might have been bom m
a wind tunnel. Washed free of clutter.
Purposeful as an arrow shot from 8 bowl
.
seen in
. any but custom-built motor cars I
'
,
Come dpveit! Ef!eT!I Ch'7ls/er is now a V-8
New front-end .. , , you can spot it a mile
:-with engines up to ~50.HP, the most
away!, .New Sup~e.nic sweptbaek wind:
Pl'werful type in thE!. world. Famous
shield'••. with comer posts that slant ba4k
Chrysl~rengirieering iJrlng,i· you Powerto allow safest possil>le Vision. New tapered
Flite,
most automatic of all no-clutch transrear 'deck. New sweeping silhouette that's ,
~nches 'lower than other big Cl\1'S. New
Twin-Tower tail-liglits that say "Stop I"
Plus' new tubeless tires! EVerything is'here
with. great. autho~ty•. New PowerFlite
Range-Selector on the dash that com- . you need ... to drive, as welI as look, ahead
of· all others. Come see America's most
pletely outmodes conventional levers on
smartly difIer~nt cars today. See for yourthe steering column. And new fashionself why. now; more than evei. the power oJ
forecast luxury interiors that surpass in
.
leadership i81tOUTS in a ChT!I$!er
color and richness anything you've ever
.~~!;e~~~tiIt\~~'li~I~~':f::es~
•
ON DI ...... AY. AT YOUR CHRYSLE.R' DEALER'S NO,\"1
•
".r
Hannum··'
.'
n
.- '.
.
.
::
'Yal. Avenue and Chester Road .
.
'.
Walta
. ;-.
"', .
,
\
SWarthmore· ~1250
-
~1251
•
Pase 6
NoveJhher-19, 1954.'
THE SWARTHMOREAN
SHEBIFP SALB
ot 1i.EAL ESTATE
TOYS
For a "reelsharp"
lawnmower
Call
REELS HARP, SW 6-4100
Small Motqr Specialist
SBBRIPP'8 OPPICB
COURT HOUBl!l. MEOIA. PA.
Friday, Decem_ 10. 1954
9 :30 A.M. Eastern 8tandard TlJne
Camera & Hobby Shop
., Pa~ Ave., Swarthmore
'IIIII1IIIIlnIlIllUIIIIUlllmIKIUHIIIlB0I1l1IllUUIIUUlllllllumWllllllllllllllllmlllllllllmmuuHI88I1UUII~
I
DEW
DROP
INN·
407
COnditione: tll50.00 C88h or cettlfted
check at tlme of sale (unlees other..
wise stated In advertisement). balance in ten days. other conditiOns on
day Of sale;
LEVARI FACIAS'
No. 2212
June Term. 19M
1. ALL THAT CERTAIN lot or
ot land with 11110 buUdlng8 Bnd
~ p'arcel
ilnprovements thereon erected. SIT...
UATE In the BQr()ugh Of Eddyiltone.
~ Delaware COunty. Pennsylvania, B8
DARTMOUTH AVENUE
BREAKFAST - LUNCH - DINNER
:; shown OD plan made by Damon and
~ Foster, CIvil Engineers. Sharon HUl,
Penn&ylvanla, dated November 26.
== 1949. bounded and described as tol ..
lows:
CLOSED EVERY SUNDAY
PENd 7 ATh·M. tO S7:3 0 P.M.
0M
on ay
roug h a tu rd ay
ii__
~
~
Daily Dinners tOe: to $1.85,
Special C""dren's P'aHers
BEGlNNlNG at a point In 1II1e
Norihearly right ot way line of Pennsylvania State Highway Route No. '162.
as shown Blxty-ftve teet Wide, said
point being located by the ae'ten fol ..
Club Fetes New and .
Reinstated Members
Preceding the 'meeting of the
Woman's Club of Swarthmore lsst
Tuesday the membership con;mittee entertained at dessert m
the loUnge the new and reinstated
members received this fall and
those who had joined during the
second haIr of last year. . Those
Serving on the membership committee are: Mrs. Birney It. Morse
and Mrs. Samuel Althouse, cochairmen, Mrs. James P. Daugherty, Mrs. George C. Wagner,
Mrs. Horace Newton Compton.
Jr., and Mrs: Walter Divekey.
The new and reinstated members who have joined the club
this fnll are:
Mrs~ E. B. Hollis. Mrs. E. Marshall Harvey. Mrs. John E. JeffQrds. Mrs. H. LeRoy McCune.
Mrs. T. Harry Bewley. Miss Edith
B.Unting; Mrs. C. G.· Strayer, Mrs.
A. M. Schroeder, Mrs; 'Walter T.
BIacki Mrs. E. J. McGuiness, Mrs.
L. A. Mccarter. Mrs. Richard K.
Noye, Mrs. Phillip T. Gelling.
Mrs. Robert S. Norton, Mrs. William H. -Lee, Mrs. Ernest A: Isberg. Mli. Arth:ur B. Kent. Mrs.
Donald B.· Cook. Mrs. Harry W.
Crowther. Mrs. W. D. Hendry,
Mrs. George A. Hunter, Sr.• Mrs.
G. Alexander Mills. Mrs. John M ..
Trossley, M~s. Raymond C. Lassiat. Mrs. Oscar J. West. Mrs.
l'hiIlipK. Hnll. Mrs. Herbert Sanford; Mrs. Howard ·W. ; Dodson...
Mrs. Edward M. James, Mrs. W.
F. Brown. Jr.. Mrs. Donald R.
LOngman. Mrs. F. T. Flaherty,
Mrs. Corben Shute. Mrs. Fl. Weston elarke. Mrs. Rlchan!; T, Battey, Mrs. John J. Lawler. Jr.
..1111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111110111111111111111111111111101111101111111111111111011111111111111111111101111nlllllllllllil! lowing courses from the !ntersectlon
of the Southerly 11ne of Beventb
8treet (as shOwn lIfty reet wide) with
the Westerly Une of BavWe Avenue
(as shown sIXty teet 1!!1de) (1) Bouth
twenty - seven
degrees
M·ty - five
\
minutes forty-flve seconds East three
hundred elevenJand fony-seve;n. onehundredths feet along the Westerly
side of Sav111~ Avenue (produced) ~
the intersection with the Northerly
rlSht of way line of above, mentioned
PellllSJlvanla 8tate Mghway No. 762.
thence along 68.id line (2) l!orth
sixty-two degrees three minuteS fltteen ..conda East thirty feet to a
point (3) thence North twenty-seven
degrees fifty-five minutes fotty-flye
secondS East six feet to a point (4)
·thence North s1.zty.two degrees three
minutes flfteen seconds East ·thlny
feet to the Intersection with ~he
Easterly side of Savllle Ave6ue produced (5) thence contlnulng along
Bald right of way Une (produced)
North sJ.xty..two degrees three minutes
flfteen seconds ~ four hundred
lIfty-elght anel four one·hundredths
feet to a wlnt of curve (6) thence on
tbe arc of a ctrcle of radius twenty..
two thousand nine hundred flftyfour and thirty one ..hundredth8 feet
From acrosS the miles comes a welcome
tn a clockwISe direction. the arc dllovoice-a son or daughter awky at
tanoo of one hundred flfty....ab: and
ninety-one one-hundredths feet to a
school, a father or mother in a distant
point of tangency (7) thence North
city, a far-off friel).d just wondering
81xty-two d _ twenty-8m minutes, "
forty-tlve aeconds East fourteen and
how you are.
ninety-four one-hundfledths teet. to
the point Of beginning In salel NorthOf all the services of your telephone, .
erly right ot way line; thence leavtng
there is none more important than this
salel right of way line North twenty8.Jght degrees two minutes 1ltteen sea..
-keeping family and friends in touch.
onds "West sixty-dve and sixty-one
Let Long Distance apan the miles.
one· hundredths. feet along· line of
lands of. Philadelphia. Baltlmore and
•
•
•
WBShlngton Railroad to .. point,
CAlI CALL AJlYWHERE IN THE U.S. FOR $2 OR LESS
thenoe North slxty·one d : " lIftyseve~ mlnutes_forty-flve
·ds East
(Exdudlng Federal tax, which f. now only 10~)
,
three hundred forty and .tftttY onehunclredths feet still a10~ line I)f
loolc In your telephone directory for the rates fro.."
lands ot PhUadelphla, Baltimore and
your tel.phone to key dtle~ throughout the cwntry.
WBShlngton RaUroa
Help Fight TB -
Buy Christmas Seals
- _.
•
~ont
Iron
Works. said Une of lands being mark,:,
eel by a cyclone wire tenDO (more or
less on line) thence' alqpg· said Une
THE BELL TELEPHONE COMPANY
OF PENNSYLVANIA
80uth thlrty-elght degilles twentyeight minutes thlrty-flve aeoonds
East sixty-dve and B1xty-seven onehundredths teet to the _ Northerl¥
right of way line (If said Pennsylvania
8tate HI~hway Route No. 762 (as
Call by number-it's fastp-I
SHOWN WIDENED TO BIXTY-NINE
FEET) thence along said 'right ot wa.y
(as shown widened to sixty-nine
WAITING
FOR THE
SUN!•
C/oth"',, in ,ng
w,,;hel
i:&'~.
AUTOMATIC. . ~, •
,Inan
CLOTHES DRYER
No matter what the 'l>wII•• be assured of dean
c1oth~o dried perfectly IncIoors ••• electrically.
Clothes are fluffed dry in clean, warm air with no.
chance of soot or dirt spotting them. Your lab Is
ea.ler, too ••• lust set the dial and forget the clothes.
Dry clothes the Ideal way, In any weather.
In the cNtomatlc electric dathes dryer you select
ot your electrical dealer's or any Philadelphia
Electric suburban store.
•
,
Be Modem-
Dry Clothes Elecfrlcall,
PHILADELPHIA ELECTRIC
feet) South six.ty-two degt'ee.8 twenty..
six minutes torty-five seconds West
one hundred. 'thirty-seven and sIxtyone one·hundred tha teet to a polnt.
thence ,still along sa.td .Northearly
rIght of way line. Bouth twenty-seven
degrees thirty-three minutes fIlteen
second.s East fOUr feet to the Northerly right of way Ilne as mown sixtv..
five feet Wide. thence still along said
Northerly right of way Une (1.8 shown
sixty-five teet wide SOuth siXty-two
degrees twenty-six minutes forty-fl,..ve
seconds: West two hundred fourtee~
and seventy-four one-hundredths f~t
to the point or plaoe of beginning.
Improvements consist of a 1 story
cement block garage 40 x 28 feet.
2. AND ALSO THAT CERTAIN lot
or piece ot ground with the buildings
and Improvements thereon erected
SITUATE In the Township of Marple,·
Connty of Delaware. 'PennsylV3nla,
bounded Bnd described Bccordlnrt to
the survey and plan thereorftDm~ladl;;e.~h~;;Y.
'Damon and Foster. Civil .1:1
Sharon Hill, .Pennsylvania,
13th. ·1939, revised .July 3l~~;".~93:;1
Bnd August 15. 1939, as rl
wit:
BEGINNING AT A POINT on the
CONTAINING In Iront or breadth
on the· ..tel Rlttenhouae Road fifty
teet and extending Of that w1c1th In
length or depth SOUtheastWpclly between ~leilin.. at rlght' _ _ to
the I18ld RlttenbOU8e Road. one hun..
_
twenty-five feet. BeIDg Lot No.
B an lIaIeI plan. Impro_enta _
Of a I &tory brlc" ancI tram_ boWIe
with bum-In _ _ 88 x U _ .
SOld'" the _ t i "'. _nol
Bll...... _4 Lena B.Jem• .h/. an4
Thomu O. _
and ~lIn.
lladuon1e1i, hI"',
FIGHT
T. B.
Mrs 8"1ester TaIkS H~mbul'fJ
CIUbwome'' nTuesday
.'
p
'Silow Given'
Ilargest in Hamburg Show history. Nelson, and Anne Solomon; also
;
Tonight and Safllrday
being directed by Bill Chap- George BabIke, Mike Breen, and
d K t
H d
Ith Elaine Keller. Sets were de"BotUed in Bond," title of
. man an
a zy en erson. w
year's Hamburg Show. wlII
choreography by Carolyn Cotton. signed by Pete Jurkat and are
5
produced Friday and Saturday.
working with the cast is Dr. being built .by Mary Schenk and
upt. Philadelphia Mint
November 19 and 20.- The annual Henry Gleitman of the faculty. crew; costumes are 1>y PhylIIa
Discuss .' Making
show. sponsored by KWINK, the who has prepared and Is directing Klock. and Jo Anne Loftus. Ughtmen's athletic society. is not a' surprise sequence.
ing by Pete Van Zandl. makeup
Money'
strictly a musical but has an
Leading roles are played by by Thea Borgmann; and Sam Ha
M
empl1asis on style. form. and Steve· Pelker. Ann Lubin. Bill is stage manager.
",:. WilliamofH.theBlester,
Jr.. pantomime.
1;;;;;;;;;';;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;1
supenntendent
U. S. mint
in Philadelphia. will speak at the
The book and songs are original by co-authors. Hugh Nlssen~eetlng of the Woman's Club of son and Charles Sullivan. and.
warthmore Tuesday, November l.solng:-wTlter. Jack Hughlett. Ac23. at 2 p.m .• taking as her sub- tion centers around prominent
DllllIn. Room Open To Publlo
ject "Making Money-a Fascina!- SwarUtmore Co_liege landmarks
~g Business!"
Mrs. Biester retired as president such as the watertower.
The cast of 50 students. the
of the Woman's Republican Club
William E. sOllen, 305 College
avenue, was awarded a Certificate
of Appreciation by the A.P.I. st
its national convention last week
In Chicago. honoring his 25 years
of work in the .technical service
department of A.P.I.'
Mr. Soden recently retired as
project engineer of the Manutac.
d Engineering De t
tunng
an
ment of Sun OlI Company. par iiiiiiiiiiii
IT IS RUMORED
that the Borough is
sick cow at the College
House•
.' Oth er peop Ie say th a t
• ht be the new aIr
• horn.
mIg
We won't take sides
of Delaware County when she rebut it is no rumor that
ceived from President Dwight D.
Eisenhower Ihe appointment as
TO PERMANENT and TRANSIENT GUESTS
superintendent of the' mint in
Harvard
and Rutgers AvenDes
Phone SwarUunore 6-9728
Philadelphia. She began her new
duties on July 1. 1953. and has the
Help Fight TB
distinction of being the 1Irst
woman ever to hold this office.
\
Past president of the Alumnae
, Park Avenue
Association of the William Penn
noW has the ·follo.wing in stock High School for Girls, the Senior
Guidance Council of Philadelphia.
Cameras
the Upper Darby Township FamBuy Christmas Seals ,.
ily Association. and the PhiladelEastman
phia FederaUon of Women's Clubs
Pony 135 & 828R. F. Bantarn
and Allied Organizations. Mrs.
Bulk Eye
is the only Pennsylvania
Biester
Duaflex III
woman
who has been national
Holiday
president of the American Legion
620
Flash
Auxiliary:
Movie Came!ras;1
Fonnerly she was treasurer of
PATT~RSON
Delaware COUlity-the fu'st and
PUNBBAL HOMB
Ansc:o
only woman to have been elected
EIghteen Y ....• Expert_nee
Readflex
Newman 35
to this office. She is also Ute
Phono Media 6·3400
Regent 35
Sur Shot
ollly
woman
who
has
been
presA
price to meet every
Super Regent Clipper.
ident
of
the
County
Treasurers'
~UY'8 need.
Anscoflex
Association of the Commonwealth ~============~
Argus
of Pennsylvania.
C-4-35.
A Four·35
f..
IHI
Mrs. Blester is an excellent exArgus 75
C·3·35
ecutive and a forceful speaker. On. caa g've at Car'of.. a.
Argus 40
Super 75
She combines wide knowledge of
Blbl'; Gift Center
her
subject
with
a
keen
sense
of
T06 E.9th Street
Zeiss
Come to
humor
and
a
charm
of
manner
CH....r 3-2396
CIontina II
Contin~
Contessa
Utat
hold herfor
listeners
spellbound'Ii==========::;:;=~
Hostesses
the day
will be
Projectors
Mrs.
Daniel
S.
Harris.
Jr..
Mrs .
Argus
Revere
George H. J arden. Mrs. William
MARGE HURD
Viewlex
Golde
B. Lowe. and Mrs. John T. Shat19an. Mrs. Stariley L. MacMillan Sandwiches - Casseroles - Salads
Toys
and Mrs. George C. Waliner will
8. Parle Avenue
Tootsie Toys-"- Dolls
SWarthmore 6-3138 "
preside at the tea table.
Games (over tOO)
Dinky Toyo- TInker Toys
«
William F. Delehanty
American Ryer Trains
\ Jig-saw Puzzles
Services
Toys for Tots
(Continued from Page 1)
Delie:ious, delightful CRUNCHY
CANDIES
,
Skaneateles
aware ptBmber of Commerce in
Pldyskool
1930 and became executive secreBon Hop
Crisp, lue:ious SALTED NUTS·
tary in 19.31. He maintained offices
Child Guidance
near 5th and Welsh streets in
Many others - all ages
Fresh from the roaster
Chester.
He was also secretary of the
<
•
The Camera and
Hobby Shop
BUY
CHRISTMAS
For Your
1.=============,
SEALS
Pre~ehristmas
•
---~--------
•
-
~
A.,,,,. ,. ".If
f'....
Shopping
BUCHNER'S
)
~ SPRINGFIELD WATER
II
I
PHILA_DELPHIA SUBURBAN WATER COMPANY
ServIng 49 MunIC'polltles I.~ Ddnware /,1ontgbmery end Ch~~rc' COLlntH's
Hobbies
leather craft
Wood Burning Sets
H.O. Kits and Sets
Gas Model Planes. etc.
Lots of other Kits
/
ChristlllaS"
Gifts
Art .
, .
,
..
• Page 7
Harvard Inn
Ceaseleu vigilance at the ~umptng
station•••• In the laboratories ••• at
the telephone swItchboards • • "
keeps Spril)gfield Water eYer ready at. the tum of a faucet,
s!')utheast side or. Rittenhouse Road
(forty-five feet wide' at the distance
of . twelve and Blxty-ane one-hun ..
dredths feet measured. South fortytwo degrees thirty-one minutes· forty
seconds West along said Southeast
Bide of Rittenhouse Road. rrom a.
point. which point is one hundred
fifty-nine: and flve one-,hundredtbs
teet SouthwestwaTdlV stln aloD$!' the
Southeast side of Rittenhouse Road
measured on the arc of a circle curvIng to the right with a radius of
three hundred feet from a pOint to
reverse curve which has a. l'8.dlu8 of
thirty feet. Bnd an arc or forty-seven
and twelve one-bundredths feet
marklnsr the Intersection of tbe
SOUtheast BIde of Rittenhouse Road
and the SouthwMt alde of PhDadel..
phla. and West Oheater Road «()Jle
hundred twenty teet wiele).
HELP
Serving you 'round
the clock •••
for only a dime a dayl
rou
01 lands of now or late
--.
Honor Soden
I
THE SWARTHMOREAN .
Materials
Oil and Water Color sets
.
Business Men's Associa-'·
Morrow's Cracker ~ Barrel
Swarthmore
SWarthmore 6·5300
I'.S" You should .see our Chr;stm~.s pa~"agesl
~~fl
~~I~V·~~~~ii~a~tiiC~h~e~s~~iir~~~~~:~~::::~:~::::~~~~~::~~::::::::~:=~
:::iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii:~R~u~ra~liicemerery.
Free
.
Use Our Lat-Away Plan
•
Prize
•
TO TREASURE
"
FRESH DAILY
tion and a member of the Chester
Kiwanis Club and of the Kiwanis
International Legion of Honor.
. Mr. Delehanty Is survived by Iii
his wife, Mary. with whom he i!I!
made his home at 200 Yale ave- SI
nue Swarthp1ore. and by two
son~. Paul W.. of Detroit. and 1_
Hugh W.• of SwarUtmore.
••
1955 Chevrolet to Be Awarded Loccilly
THEATRE PHARMACY
THEATRE SQUARE
.
,
.•
Treasure Chest ticket, obtain your additional FREE chance on a new
.
51 NG h . N· I T
Before depOSIting your
.
b
ded
locally
to
a
lucky
person
DEP9
TI
. t elr ahona reasure
1955 Cherolet to· e, s:war
Chest ticket with
.'
* * *
I·
'.
.Rum,sey .Chevrolet
CALL FOR and DELIVERY SERVICE
•
. i'
5WarthmQre 6-6130
FREE ,.rtillfJ
.A..ple..
.'
SW."'ilmore .6-3154·
.
South Chester Road
\. Theatre Square
\
P8jI;e
"I saw it in The Swarthmorean."
"I,vlslon & Radio Senice
co.piete
Sfoci of Tllo ..
for Ho ••
ROIEIIT 1,00115
sw ~3ii'-w"i.
E••••• Si.do,
Springfield
Laundromat
lI.p.''''
Do,.
104 101"_ore Plk.
KI ....0252 \
RNr 'artloll Lot-Ilear E.Ira.'.
THOM SEREMBA
UPHOLSTERING
Swarthin.. r. 6·1448
SLIP COVERs-DRAPERIES
WILLIAM BROOKS
Swarthmore R.f.reneH
"0•• Sharoo Hili On4
More thon 25 yean
Ashes & kubbishRemoved
Lawns Mowea.. Gerieral
.,p.rt.n~.
,
HaulbUr
236 Harding Ave::ilt:orton. Pa
Sheet Metal
Work
•
George Myers
Box 48 SWarthmore 6·0740
Jewelry Repairad
_ Phone: SW 6--4216
EMIL SPIES
WatChma";
Formerlr of F. C. Bod. & Sons
128 Yole Ave.
Fine Watch ond
Swarthmore, Pc.
Clock Repairs
PETER DI NICOLA
Driveway Construction
VAN ALEN BROS.
Aspha!t or Concrete
200 W. Ridley Ave.
Cellar Walls Re·Plastered
Ridley Park
Phone Swarthmore 6·2526
SW 6·4742
WA 8·2440
Volunteers are urgently needed
for the "ThanksiPvlng March" of
the Delaware County Chapter of
the National Association for Retarded Children.' The March will
be held Tuesday',evening, NovemPete Bloom, son of· Mr. and ber 23 from 7 to 8 p.m. Please can
Mrs. Herman Bloom of Columbia Mrs. James Daugherty, KIngsavenue wlll be arriving home on wood 3-9489 for information.
Wednesday night for the holiday
weekend. Pete, who is a freshrnan
Mr. and Mrs. John Aaron and
at Cornell University, has been three children of Magil,l road will
elected to Sigma Phi local frater- visit rehitives 'in Birmingham,
nity and is a member of the l.&la., over the Thanksgiving holi- ;
Orpheus Club, the freshman glee day.
Bob AIli~on, a junior at West
Chester State Teachers College,
and George Allison, a freshman
at 'Gettysburg, will be at their
home on Vassar avenue over the
holid~y weeKend.
ATLANTICJUEL OIL
IRON FIREMAN
OIL BURNERS
.,
and
HORACB
B.
'Passmore
ji,;:
~
,(S.-
... - - '.,
..... '='r~l~
and heatin9 equipment
Service available to our
customers on all malres of
oil burners
Level payment plan on oil
bills. Automatic deliveries
of ail during the heating
season
RBIlL BSTATB 6INSURANCII
,
609 S. CHBSTBR RD.
S'wAllnn.lOU,
P8NNA.
Guaranteed, Standard Coal
/, '
---
-
Hits New High in
Knock·Free Powerl'
Wm. W. Rpmfonl CO.
SI:IICLI
POWER-·
'.
USCGtil"
CHES,''-
SWallbmore 6·6455
CHesler 4-6246
SWarthmore 6·8761
PROTECTm?
~
RESIDENTIAL AND
COMMERCIAL
Yau can insure your antique furniture. silver.
. paintings, tapestries or
other works of art against
. practicallX all riskll of
losl or damage. Ask· about
our "All Risks" Fine Arts
PoUcy.
Doris Greene, senior at the University of Delaware, wilt arrive
Wednesday evemng for the holidays. Doris is th~ daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Grover C. Greene of
South Chester road.
Alterations
335 Dartlllouth Avenue
J. F. BLACKMAN
Peter E. Told
AU Lines of Insurance
333 Darlmo';"th Ave.
Swarlhmore, Pa.
SWarthmore 6-1833
Mr. and'Mrs. Frederick W. Held
of Westininster avenue were the
weekend guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Donald R. Stokes and family of
Arlingto~, Va.
mDWIIln
uunll
_
SIIIlTf
CharlesE. Fischer
BUILDER"
co.
Swarthmore 6·2253
C LA S S I F I E.D ADS
PERSONAL
PERSONAL _ Television, radio
,
.
t
. and appliance repairs - promp
service. TV sets repaired in the
home. Robert Brooks, SWarthmore 6-3889.
PERSONAL _ Bendix home appliance service. Washers, driers,
ironers. Factory traineli servicemen. General Bendix parts. We
also repair ABC Whirlepool and
Kenmore. 51 South Morton aven,ne. Call SWarthmore 6-3312.
PERSONAL - Andrew Spanier;
Jr., 1002 Girard.avenue, Swarthmore. SWarthmore 6-2198. Furniture retlnishing. Custom cabinet
work. General Carpentry. Free
estimates.
'
PERSONAL _ Registered Spencer corsetiere. Mrs. Elsie H. McWilliams Telephone SWarthmore
6-4583 for appointment.
PERSONAL Young woman
employed' at college available
evenings as baby sitter..KIngswood 3-1897.
FOR SALE
FOR SA~ -, All wool Wilton rug
9 x 12- Persian design. Perfect
condition.\ Bargain. Call MEdia 60808.
\
FOR SALE - Cable-Nelson baby
grand piano in good condition.
Call SWarthmore 6-1390.•
FOR SALE Settee, blanket
. chest. Dough Tray. Place orders
no,," for Christmas. Business location, Rose Tree, December 1. Alllson's Antiques. SWarthmore 6:?:30~·5~0~.....,,-:-;=--_--;__-.,.-;--::::;:-...,
FOR SALE Special sale of
African violets. Mrs. Longwell,
222 Lafayette avenue. SWartlimore 6-5508.
FOR SALE James portable
,dishwasher with sterlizing unit.
Four months old.
$269.95.
Will sell for '
to
house with
WANTED
wholesale prices: Thorn S,remWANTED _ Young engineer and ba. Upholsterer. Phone Sharon
his mother desire a nice quiet Hill 0734.
apartment in Swarthmore area. FOR SALE--A beautifully markReply Box L. The Swarthmorean.
ed tan and white female boxer.
WANTED-Mature woman wishes Seven months old. Has had percounter work or general house- manent shots. Well·tralne4, housework. Prefers four days per week. broken. Exce'l\ent with children.
Can work more. Excellent refer-Alert watch-dog; $50. or best ofter.
KIngswood 3-1134.
ei:uies. CHester 2-1302.
WANTED _ Woman for house- FOR SALE-Wild goose cast iron
work and ironing. Part-time.
andirOns. Reproductions. Call
I"'~n
week. Capable, de- :s~w.:.:ar::.::th=m::.::o.:.:re=6-=-1:.:9-=1.:.:9=.
Fond,of chil-'
FOR RENT
FOR RENT-Room, kitchen privileges for women in teachers
eggs in
apartment.
Call SWarthmore 6your own hours. Write
Brook Farms, Box 175, Lititz, Pa. 8907.
FOR RENT - Six room furnished
LOST AND FOUND
. apartment, on Park avenue,
garage
and utilities. Available
FOUND - Green canvas covering
for some large article. Found on Deeernber 16 through J4!lY 1. $,125
Park avenue.~Wartlimore &"4910. a month. KIngsWOoci 3~191.
Swarthmore and Vicinity
~~ltors
SW 6-0108
EDWARD G. CHIPMAN
AND SON
GENERAL CONTRACTOR
Tile Floors
Plastic Tile
Modern Kitchens
Alterations
1401 Ridley Avenue
CHester 2·4759
2·5689
of the four
divisions-Humanities,
Social
Sciences,
Natural Sciences.
or Engineering. However, by taking a limited number of specially
designed elective courses and by
devoting a summer vacation to
practice teaching he can upon
graduation as a Bachelor of Arts
or Science be certified for secondary school teaching in Pennsylvania.
The Fund for the Advancement
of Education grant will enable the
Department of Psychology and
Education, under whose 'admin"
istratio~ the program will operate, to mc.periment with these
elective courses and to develop
those which prove most useful to
the stud!'llt going into
and which at the same time fit
inlo and contribute to his fundamental program in the liberal
aris and sciences.
Arrangements have been made
with Swarthmore High !'Ichool SO
that' ti1(; Swarthmore College students who receive their scholarships may' do' their practice teaching during the summer school session there.
President Smith stated further,
"We ..belleve that pubnc education Is in a period of re-examination arid transition, and that it is
important for liberally educated
teachers to be ava1lable in large
numbers duriJlg the coming years.
The FUnd for the Advancement of
Education's grBllt will enable
Swarthmore College to make an
added contribution towl\l'd the
achieving' of this goal."
BlIlDIIiB CONSTRUCTION
1J¥a5.(HESTER 1D.-.'145O .
every
~~
OILHMT
na..-,.en
01' .an'IS _OIl.utll.", WAil_ ...""n
i : I
4
•
CHRISTMAS
CLUB
,
CHECKS
am'ounting to
$435,168.00
\
You too c.an have
When'you're behind the
wheel on center-city
, streets, you're behind
DAy'and NIGHT
OIL BURNER
SERVICE
1IONDAY TBRlJ SAT1JllDA~
,
NOON
COAL
the eight-balll Yes,
right in the middle of
that struggle with
jammed traffic •••
that search for ~ye
parking space. Of (l!>urse.
you can 'save yoUrself
all that trouble.
It's easy ••• going
•
WITH A 1955 CHRISTMAS CLUB, ACCOUNT
We invite
J.~ :A.Q~EE"
SWarthmore
YQU
to start your new 1955 Club
I
JOIN THIS W-=I~ at CIIny of Q.,r three offices
,
~
by PTCI Two tokens
COllI;
a
MERRY. 'CHRISTMAS
only 35c.
fIREPl.ACE WOOD
Opposite .oro~" .....11
INN
mailed this year to thousands of happy families in Media. Swarthmore al'!d Springfield
THIS LITTLE TOKEN
CAN 'END YOUR
DRIVING TROUBLES!
TDlfiE5
011. . . . . . . _
and n'etted over $100 at its recent
rumo::::::
--_.-----
8tlNDAYS and aoLIDJl.yS
"
AUXILIARY PLAN BENEFIT
SWARTHMORE. PI'.
SW 6-4041
Many AHractive Mo••s Available
every fifth
i~Wh~~er~e~a~s,~a~n~e~w~c~as~e~o~f~tu~b~e~r~-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~:~ii~~~iiiiiiiil~~~~~ii~
SW 8-6616
Dorothy Heinze, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. W. O. Heinze pf
Strath Haven avenue, will arrive
Tuesday from DePaw University
in Greenc)lstle, Ind., for \he holiday seas~n.
culosls Is reported
STRATH
CONSTRUCTION
Balri1
& Bird
,
.F~IRYIEW ROADS.
Builders
PAINTING
and
CARPENTRY
ARE YOUR ANTIQUES
BURGESS BACKS DRIVE
S Joseph' ReynOlds, Burgess of minute, and
22nd minute
The Legion Auxiliary of Swarth~!\he local orglinizawarthmore, has signed the an- one life Is taken by this insidious mOJ;J1 will hold a Christmas des....
sert card p arty on Deeembe r . 13 tion were lns
. talled in N 0 vember
president Courtney Smith of ntiual Christmas Seal Proclama- killer,
swarthm ote College has,' an- o~, launching the annual camWhereas, in this community at at 1 p.m. at the home of Mrs. by Mrs. Clarence Hlorthe, Dlrecd
f t ber Georg\! P. Warren, 327 South tor of the Delaware C,ounty Counnounced that a $15,000 two-year P81gn for the prevention and conmoment the $a ow 0 'u - h te
do Th
rt
III
grant ba d been. reeeived fr, om the trol ·of tuberculosis which, will this
culosis lies across BOrne 1,200, C es 'r roa
e pa y w
ell of the American !Algion Aux'ford Foundation Fund for the open Monday,. November 22
benefit a veteran's family which
Advancement of Education. This th
h t h
' home;;, and
the Legion Auxiliary will befriend, iliary.
grant is to be used ~ part to roug .ou t e United states.
Whereas, the Delaware County at christmas tinte. Guests will
-.,-,------establish summer scholilrships for
In his proclamatlon Mr. Rey- Tuberculosis Association, a volun- hAve a share in giving to this
Mr. and Mr.. Thomas Gasey,
!hose students who are parUclpat- !,olds mentioned tbat approx-I tary orga$l\tion, supporte!! by familY by contributing a can of formerly' of Park. avenue, 'and noW
iDg in a program leading to 1mately 3~O people in Delaware 1 the sale at Christmas Seals, co- food.
llving i'; Washington, D. C., will
leacher certification in: addition to County w1l1 be a1IIicted with TB operates closely with your Health
The Auxlllary nas contributed be in, Swarthmore over the
xeg ular liberal arts tralnlng and during 1955, and he called for Department and other agencies In, funds to various veterans and Thanksgiving weekend visiting
who in consequence must fulfill support of the TB Association's the tight against tQberculosls,
community organizations this faU friends and relatives in this area.
practice teaching requirements efforts to check the spread of the
Therefore, I, Joseph Reynolds, iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiijiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;iiiii iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
during the summer month~.
disease.
Burgess of Swarthmore, urge
. Many stU'cfe"'nis who ordinarily
The Association urges every every citizen to. inform hi~self
THANKSGIVING-with all the Trimmings
citizen to inform himself about about TB and what he can do to
must earn money. during the sum- tub ercuIOSls
' and protect himself help protect himself and his famENJOY IT WITH US
mer to provide funds for their and hi s fanu'1y against It by tak- ily against. it. I hereby call for
ular
coliege
program
will
thus
l'ng
d
t
f
reg
a van age 0 the chest x-ray your support of all community ef•
be enabled to take this time to s urveys. Th e Chri simas
Make
your
r8servatJolII,
now
Seal forts to check the spread of this
meet one of the majOr require-,, 'lllVe'
for the entJre fqmJly
.
Is the onI y financial means dis~a.se. Every one of us can buy
. t'n!n
menls for seeondary school teach- af mam
a1 g this program as and use Christmas Seals generousiog as outlined by the State De- well as rehabilitation, emergency Iy for the benefit of all."
Dinner served 1:00 P.M. to 7:311 P.M.
assistance to victims' families, _ _ _ _ _ _---;;:;;;--~
parhnent of Public Instruction.
No reservations after 7:00 P.M.
swarthmore College does not and health education.
r
How CIIrl.fla. Scl.ace Heals
offer a major or minor in EducaThe proclamation states:
I
tion and the student wishing to
"Whereas, tuberculosis, a dis"What G.-",titude
prepare 'for seeonda,,¥ school ease which can be prevented and
Can Do"
leaching will still choose his can be cUred, costs our nation apWalter E. Parrott. Manager
SW 6-0680
major and minor fields from one proximately $600,000,000 annually, ,WI' "10 IICI S••da,. 9:45 A.M.
Jack Prichard
at Cornell.
Robert Clothier of, Columbia
avenue will be at his home for
Thanksgiving day. Bob, a freshman at Dartmouth College, is the
son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Clothier of Colum'ia avenue.
Lois Storlazzi, a freshman at
Beaver College in Jenkintown,
will be at her home on Park avenue over the holiday weekend.
Lois is the daughter of Dr. and
Mrs. Jo~eph Storla..i.
Joan Acker, daughter, of Mr.
and IIfrs. Charles E. Acker of
WlIlingford, will be home from
the University of Maryland for
the Thanksgiving vacation. Joan
is a senior at the University.
= ____
New Premium Bason.
College Gets. $15,000
FroID Ford Fo''im.dation
,
':===========~
--
• Authorized Distributors
• for
~~~~e~~
__:1~9~._1_9:S4::~::~~________~~______~'~r~H~E~S1V~AR~·I~·EUd~~O~REAN~~'~________________________-;__________~p~.~~e~9
NEEDS VOLUNTEERS
Home for tile Holidays
~:::::;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;=:;;;=~ Iclub
Roofing
Gutters
Air Conditioning
Heating
Oil • Gas • burners
,
November '19, 1954
TIlE SWAR11IMOREAN
•
8
"
.'
'
.
OJ Q.ElAWlRE COU·NlY
.-
.~-
•
THE
• Page 12
Garnet Team Prepares
, For Turkey Class!&
Take Eighth Straight
Over Prospect
28-0
The Swarthmore High School
football team continued to roll as
they downed visiting Prospect
Park High School 28 to O. Although there was no do,:,bt as to
the outcoml' from the very beginning1 the homesters were pressed throughout by a scrappy opponent and their own: mi~cues.
Prospect Park received the
further back than before. Aggressive and heads up defensive play
rushed the Prospect punter hard,
resulting in a poor kick that onl~
traveled 15 yards. The Garnet
offense went to work and in a
series of three plays made the IIrst
touchdown. The short pass to
Kroon, and end run by Lewis, and
then Cal Coleman swept right in
for the IIrst touchdown, assisted
by the blocking of Hummer,
Kroon and Hollander. Pete Kroon
converted hi' 22nd extra point
of the season and the Garnet led
7-0.
Following the resulting, kick-off,
Prospect Park offense again was
stopped cold and'the visitors were
forced to punt. It is worthy to
note that the kick-offs by Pete
Kroon kept the visitors in the
shadow of their own goal· posts
on each occaoion.
, Prospect braced for the next
series of plays and forced Swarthmorets Dick Snyder to punt. The
•
C~osen
Heac!
,nvestment Bankers
fr o lJ1
-
•
}letp
HELP
flO"'' '
(Colltinued
Page 1)
Savings Bank, Chi"ago, and three
years later became Clilifornla representative of Halsey, Stuart &:
, • Your "Doctor want. to
Co., Inc., with headquarters In
get yQU on tbe Road to
San Francisco. He held various
Recovery.
But he caD sucpositions in the Halsey, Stuart &:
c:eed
only
witb
your comCo., organization:' syndicate deplete co-operation. Accept
partment, Chicago office, 1927-28;
Rnd follow bi. coun...,!.
sales manager, Philadelphia office,
And be sure to bring his
1929-32; sales 'manager, r.rew York
iN HOSPITAL
•
I
prestription. to us for
office, 1932-37.
'
Patricia A. Told of Park ave-J
prompt and predse comHe withdrew ,in /1937 to o~
nue, physical education teacher at
pounding. Thank you!
ganize, 'In Philadelphia, his own
the local school, is in Taylor Hosfirm Schmidt, Poole &: Co., prede- pital for observation as a result
CATHERMAN'S
cessor to the company ,he heads
of an accident last week. '
DRUG STORE
today, Schmidt, Poole, Roberts &:
Parke, a member of the Philaen. pictured above while serv- delphia - Baltimore S t'o c k ExHelp Fight TB
ing as a crew member of the change.
Destroyer USS Tucker, is Ihe
Throughout the years Mr. Schson of Dr. and Mrs. Frank G. I midt h,as worked energetically in
Keenen of Harvard a.venue. The
the interest of the underwritipg
Tucker Is scheduled to visit
and s~curities business, has held
Hong Kong, the Philippine isvarious positions of leadership in
lands and Japan during the cur-- trade groups, and is widely known
Buy Christmas Seals
rent cruise.
throughout the IInancial comrrunity. He has served the' Investment, Bankers Association of
America in .numerous capacities:
vice-president, 1952-54;' governor,
A crowd of interested spectators 1945-47; chairman, Federal Legisoverllowed the we~t s~ands of the lation Committee, 1946-47; cn~"'-"I
down to the smallelt
Swarthmore High School Gym man, Rights Committee" 1952;
last Saturday .night to watch '32 Special Convention Attendance
tail h~s made our .ervice
dogs and their owners demon- Committee, 1953-54; and many
renowned for 76 years.
strate canine ooedience tech- others.
niques.
The Philadelphia Dog
His interest in the investment
e
Training Club presented the ex- banking business is also 'rellected
hibltionfor the oenefit of the in other positions of leadership he
Blind Fund 'of the 'Swarthmore has_ filled:' chairman, Eastern
DIUCTOU O. RlNIIALI
Lions Club.
li'ennsylvania Group of the I.B.A.,
Dogs of all sizes from a kiltie 1950, at which time he inaugurat1820 CHESTNUT STREET
and a young cock!,r spaniel to a ';d the I.B.A. Investment Fo~um
OlIVER H. Mia.
MARY A. MIA, Pr~donl
I
german, shepl!erd; and afghan in the East; District Committee,
relephone RI ~1581'
hound and several labrador and INati
golden· retrievers, participated in Dealers" 1949-51; and presiden,t,
the individual 'and mass, drills of Bon'd ,'Club' 0' f Philadelph,'a,' 1943.
obedience training.. A toy french Bus',ness',soc,'al," and service affilIpoodle . no bigger
than,
",
,
" ' a shoe,
d 'a"tions in''elude: director, PennsylJanet Murray's;' Sybil" fascinate , ;'imia Gas' Management Company~
Reach' (I: New Pro'peel;v•.,Buyer Group
the audience with her' sub-novice M..mi~lpBi, Bond Club of Phllaroutine. Pat "
Knowles',
wire;,
d'
'd delphia', F,'nanc,'al An' alysts ,of
, FLORE",CE ,GR,EEN BROOMALL
haired terrier was shown 'in 'v' - Philadelphia.: Financial Advisory
"
ually in the novice ·.-lass and
" ,
'.
•
d
Committee, Y. W.,C. A., Phlladel'SwCr"hmoreSpe~;fI'ist
Nancy Grau showed her gol en phia', and Executive Committee,
retr,'e'ver, Bonnie, in the o p e n ,
'
Golf Association of Philadelphia.
class.
"
Mr. Schmidt 'has been promiRepresenting,
Mary Ann ,Megaree's standard
nently identified with the evolufrench poodle, Vicki; gaye an tion of, Invest in, America' Week
amazing demonstrati"" of· scent and has played a vitBl role in
discrimination,
retrieving
lost
articles, and, following directions. establishing this project on a naTwo 10-year-olds, Rickie Lager- tionall;lasis. Currently, he 'is
Financing
chairman
of
the
Executive
Comman with a standard french
!
'
poodle and Pattie McDermott with mitteeof the National Invest In
PROVIDENCE ROA." MEDIA
a collie, proved that children can
organization.
tra, in and handle dogs ai' easily as
In the past few years, Mr. SchWallingford
6.1761
.
.,
midt
has
helped
in
planning
the
grown-ups.
The 'h'
s ow chairm a n, Ken Sad- executive development program
ler, reports that the financllil success of the demonstration' mskes
possible a sizeable contribution ,to
the Chester Branch of the Pennsylvaia Association for the Blind,
The Swarthmore Lions Club extend; its thanks to Swarthmore
residents and 'The Swarthmorean
f
their support and cooperation
i~r again making a Blind Fund
'project 'a success.
r=[DHQ) fC11r (Q) ~
-Spectators
Applaud
.
Prospect safety man fum b led w,th
a long high kick and as the ,
rolled across the goal line,
John Lewis pounced tlpon 'It~O'''"
the second touchdown. Pete Kroon
converted. No. 23 and Swarthmore
stood out in front 14-0 as the IIrst
quarter ended.
The heads up and rugged defensive play caus.d the visitors to
fumble near midfield, following
the opening of the second quarter.
Charging George Pappas captured
the oval and Swarthmore was in
business again. Good blocking by
Stephani, Pappas and Dellmuth
got Lewis a big chunk of yardage. around left, and' placing the
ball on the Prospect Park 15. On
the next play Cal Coleman started around right end as if a repeat
performance of the IIrst touchdown, but as the defense rushed
up the lIeet halfback leaped into
the air and tossed to the waiting
arms of Pete Kroon behind the
goal line. Kroon accomplished No.
24 and Sw..rth~ore led 21-0.
.
Three mmutes before the half
ended, one of Swarthmore's eight
fumbles was recovered by the
opponents on the Garnet 35. In a
few, short plays, the visitors had
moved to the two yard line but
were 'denied a greaf opportunity
to sore as the half ended.
The third quarter was a seesaw affair with Swarthmore having difficulty in bringing a consistent drive. A fourth touchdown
came in the last quarter as Quarterback Malin mixed smashes by
the line by Hummer and Delimuth
with passes to Pete Kroon. Dellmuth scored his IIrst touchdown
since the Media game and started
to look like his old self. During
this same quarter, the Gamet
fumbled to their opponents twice,
once crossing the goal Une and
another' time inside the ten.
Again, Ed Noyes and Preston
Hollander took over on oftense for
the absent Stu Bowie and carl
Thomas and did very' well, considering their la~ o! experience
at these spots.
Bud Stephani, Mike Hurd, Allen
Baughn, and Co-Captain Roger
Zensen saw a good bit of action,
along with Mal Tippett, Manuel
Hallier, John Coleman, Bob Keller, Steven Carter, Lee Gemm1ll,
George Garrett, Dan Jackson,
John Lang, 'Andy Jones,
and Scott Pieeard. '
lIorrIaon
to
of the •. B.A., the Institute, of, In-\
vestment Ban kin I, sponsored
jointly with the Wharton School!.
of Finance and Commerce, Unl- I
versity of Pennsylvania. He has
frequently appeared on tlie In:stitute program', both as a'lecturer
and discussion leader.
During World War I Mr. Schmidt was First Sergeant, Company
F, First Gas Regiment; A.E.F., and
saw action at St. Mihiel and,
Argonne.
·
.
D
Canine emonslratIOn
EXPERT MANAGEMENT
de-
'THE OLIVER H. BAIR CO.
_or
-
,
FOSTERB. SIMMONS
Rea' Estate Sa'es (,
,
-
JrI'TER'S, Fashion COrner
BOYS ALL WOOL
TOP COATS
WITH
ZIP-IN LININGS
"
.
1799 to· 2299
thlt doctor and hospital
bills nearly always cODle
in follciwfag lUI accident!
Tbat'. whJ' it pa)'II to ha...
Accld.at I1lIuranC8 with
fall Medical Relmbarument Included.
WARM
I
AND PRACTICAL, A RICH
LOOK MAKES THESE COATS A
TWE~DY
REAL
MAN'S COAT.
PETER E. TOLD
All IU."• ., , ......ce
333 Dartmouth Ave.
Swartto..... Po.
"
WARM ZIP-IN LINING
SIZES -
-
6 TO 12
VISIT OUR CoMPLETE
SCOUT DEPARTM~
(,
'. . ' "
,
"--1!a!!li!~~!I!!5!I!!!!IIiI~~~____~:~
,
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THE SWARTHM
FIGHT
T. B.
N
CHRiSTMAS
SEALS
NOV 26 1954
•
V'OLUME 26-NUMBER 48
Teachers' Salaries
Report Given at ~. &S
Doubled .in
Not
Decade,
But
Attracting
Recruits
The time may come when
teachers' salartes are of more con_
cern to parents than to teachers
(if there are any teachers left).
This was easily surmised by those
attending
Tuesday
evening's
meeting of the Home and School
Association in the high school
auditorium.
That the time was not yet was
even more obvious from the proportionately higher number of
teachers than parents among the
75 or so who turned out to heat'
the heralded report of a survey
of teachers' salary standing in
swarthmore School District. Perhaps some others will drop into
the local public library and peruse the 39 'pages of comparative
data and charts assembled by an
eight-member committee headed
by W. Newton Ryerson, bound
into book fonn. It was announced
that a capy of the analysis wouid
be "preseQted to the Library for
the convenience of interested residents.
Chalrman' nyerson and Committeeman JO/m Seybold traced
survey 'conchisions on charts
flashed, upon the stage screen by
John Piccard. George Patterson,
another lay member of the committee, summarized the IIndings
into two ot a gratifying nature
and two which might cause uneasiness. The fact that the rate
of teachers' salaries on a "Yl'ars
of experience!', basIS has,lmp~'I'ed
substantially in Swarthmore between the first years consideredin tlie sUrvey' 1989"40 and the
present was deemed favorable, as
also was the fact that in the
cuqe.~t sc4\1J11,year local teachers'
salaries had finally gone above the
consum,er ,price Index. On the
other side,' said Mr. Patterson,
attention should be focused on the
accumulated lag of the past ten
years when salaries have been
under consumer prices, and on
tliiifllht that SwarthnlOre median
salaries are not increasing at the
rate of Pen~=lvania teach,ers as
•Ith
_,
a
h Swarthmore
h I
woe, a oug
median 'salaries were in 1939 and
'd bly
continue to be today cons' era
higher than the median for all
tea h
f the State
e ers 0
.
Mr. Patterson asked for alert-
.a.SO PER YEAR
SWARTHMORE. FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 1954
ROTARY SPEAKER
Woma ..'s Club Speaker
Harry R. Draper, M.D., psychiatrist, will address the Rotary
Club's luncheon meeting today at
the Ingleneuk on "The Psychiatrist Looks at Sex Offenders."
Dr. Draper is consultant for the
SKIn and Cancer Hospital, Philadelphia, and is conducting research studies at the Philadelphia
ASSOCiation of the Blind. He is
associate
psychiatrist at the
Philadelphia Mental Hygiene Association. He has, been, the
psychiatric expert on several
criminal cases. Dr. Draper,.is a
Park avenue reSident.
Hold 8th Grade Teas
Mrs. S., C. Harris Dies
After Long Illness
The eighth grade mothers group
held three teas recently with a
iotal of 72 mothers attending.
Mrs. John Honnold of Rutgers
avenue was hostess for the moth: Wellesley Road Wpman
ers of section B. Mrs. Peter
Was Noted Contralto
Kroon, Who is telephone chairSoloist
man for the mothers group, presided at the tea table.
Mrs. Samuel Caldwell Harris of
Mrs. John S. McQuade, Jr., of 30 Wellesley road passed away at
Moylan, program chairman, held
Sunday morning in the
Lankenau Hospital, Overbrook,
where she had been a patient for
several months.
Born Bennie Withers in Charlotte, N.C., 59 years ago, Mrs .
Harris had lived in Swarthmore
for the past 15 years. She was
educated at Converse College,
Spartanburg, S.C., and had taken
advanced private vocal instructlon with leading New York music
$200 Taken from Cash
coaches.
Box ,and Vending
A concert artist of note, she
,
Machine
was generous with her talent. A
The
member of the Swarthmore Prescrime wave spread to
byterian Church, Mrs. Harris was
Night Address Nov. 30th
Swarthmore last weekend with
a faithful member of the church
By Arts Foundation
the burglary of the local Co-op
chotr for several years. ,She was
at 403 Dartmouth avenue some
Director
also a member of the Swarthmore
time Saturday night or early SunWoman's
Club and her concert
Carleton Smith, president of the
day. The thief or thieves apprograms had been enjoyed there.
parently entered through a lava- National Arts Foundation" will be
She loved beauty and was an en-'
tory window' on the east side of the speaker at a joint meeting of
thusiastic gardener, decorator, and
the building, forced a 'heavy lock_ the Woman's Club of Swarthmore
lIower arranger.
ed door Into' the store Itself, took and the Junior Woman's Club on
Surviving besides her husband,
$200 cash from a petty cash box' Tuesday, November 30, at 8 p.m.
who
is director of sales of the duunder the .cash register counter, This will be an open mee ti ng 'and
Pont electro"chemicai di~on, is
broke open and robbed a cigarette members of the community are
a sou, Edwin William, a .Iophomachine of its money, ransacked cordially invited. Mr. Smith,
more at Dnke University; two sis"
a large, closed but unlocked safe whom Emily, Post calls "Mr.
ters, Mrs. John A. Ferrell, Raleigh,
where records are kept in the' Meet--the-People" has chosen as
N.C., and Mrs. J. :e. Efird, Chiroffice, and escaped through' an his subject "Great Minds and
lotte, N.C.; and a brother, B. F.
Will Tell of Way to Travel Withers, Jr., also of Charlotte.,
office window on the same side of What They Think."
the building.
,Mr. Smith, a native of the
Smartly on Small
Funeral services and Interment
A number of checkS, ready for Illinois prairies, is a music crttlc
took
place Monday. afternoon in
Budget
deposit, were l"!t in another un- ot:note. He spent two months in
Charlotte, N.C.
'
locked box near the casb b9x. A, 1958,-behlnd the Iron Curtain and
Marjorie Hark5,J.Jnion Paclllc's
locked .¥e in the store ,~~ t1No mo'hllis Iuir siimn\e,r!Vlalthig ira",el cOlJl!!lltant" c,.,l1lspeak ~ Hawaii Bell,·bedlCClted
lntact with cash and checks inside. aU along the tree side of the Iron ''Penny-Wlse 'But Travel-Smart
At Valley Forge
'In ransacking drawers of all desks Curtain. Seeking precious manu- at the meeting of the Woman's
in the office the thieves came sc~ip'~, of Bach, Mo;oar~ Beetho- Club of Swarthmore Tuesday, NoThe new Hawaii Bell In the
upon new flashlights and appro- ven, and Wagner, he traveled ex- vember 3D, at 2 p.m. She will give Washington Memorial Carillon at
priated a sUver and black striped tensively in Hungary, Czech01l10- the latest word on fabrics and Valley Forge was dedicated at
one. ,
valda, and the Soviet zones of fashions for travel, telling how to noon on Thanksgiving Day. The
The robb'lry was discovered by Austria and Germany. He located plan and assemble an appropriate, address and prayer of dedication
(Continued on Page 10),
and verifted the existence of many but colorful wardrobe for the were given by Reverend Frederick
luable treasures includlng the time, place, and the pocketbook. Bertram Hornby of Swarthmore
BROWNH!S STAGE PLAY
;:mous "st. Matth~w" Passion of
Miss Harker holds a unlque and the gift was accepted by the
B h H
tablished the fact that position among women employees Reverend John Robbins Hart,
The Brownies of Third Grade a: l' e es
. ts ere being of American railroads. She tours
Ph.D., Rector of the Washington
.
ted on Tues - ill
pnce lIy
ess 'hmanuscflp
w
th
try fro
Troop 560 were mves
Id .
f mer Bene • e coun
m coast to coast ,
m a InorPoland and- descn'blng the delights' of travel, Memorial Chapel and President of
day, November',23, at 3 : 30,at the d' eg.a
t
M en stery
home of Troop Leader, Mrs. J 0 h n 'Clne 0 a
.. 1 W ,
sugges tin g d es ti nati ons , and offer- the Valley Forge Historical So •
Aaron, 633 Magill road. Mrs, that al~ th". ongma.
agn~r ing expert and helpful ideas on ciety.
manuscnpts gIVen to HItler on his many aspects of tra"el.
The Carrillon is housed in the
Richard Enion, Troop Leader,
•
conducted the investiture.
50th birthday, including "Das
prior to joining Union Pacific's Memorial Bell Tower which was
Rheingold" and "Die Walkuere," staff Miss Harker had a versatile originally conceived by Dr. W.
The entertainment for the
are missing.
promotional background in radio, Herbert Burk, founder of the Naafternoon was a playlet which the
d t'
Brownies had entirely planned
The National Arts Foun a ,on, television, and motion pict,ures. A tional Shrine at Valley Forge, as
(Continued on Page 4)
and staged, Dressed i~ period which Carleton Smith heads, is a native New Yorker, she studied the Hobert Morris Thanksgiving
costumes . which the gIrls ~ad non-profit organization for in- speech at Columbia University Tower. It was thus thought to be
made, they acted the Tha.nksg,v- creasing enjoyment' and under- and has appeared with a number a memorial to Robert Morris, reing Story. "Dinner" conslsted of standing of the arts. It is his work of Little Theatre groups.
nowned financier of the Revolucider and cookies.
to originate and administer pro..
Her professional background in- tionary War ~ and an expression of
. t
e grams to promote such under- eludes Columbia University, the thanksgiving to God for the
The members of this !QOP a,: standing and enjoyment. He also National Office of the Boy Scouts United States of America.
Ja ne Aaron, Ann Blessmg, PnTen directors were elected by cilia Brobeck, Jeanne D raper, has his own firm of management of America, and Time, Inc. She
Each of the states contributed
the Swarthmore Property Owners Sarah Enion, J oanny E ~pens h ad e, consultants in New York and was associated with the March of one of the bells and the National
"~g Chr,'stlne Garrette, Patncia Hally, numbers among his clients large Time as public relations director Birthday Bell made a total of 49.
A ssociation at its annual mee~.
been active in the mer- .In order to complete, the carillon
in the Woman's Club on Novem- Louise 'Hay, Julie Huse, Betsy insurance companies, prominent and has
. .
d f hi
fi Id
'
t·
Kamp
Carolyn
Miles,
Carol
Mor(Continued
on
Page
5)
chanclismg
an
as on e s.
b er IS. A reorganization mee mg
and mske It posslbl!! to play all
,
As
'ti
be f Adv
'Clare Walker and Nancy
an ac ve mem r a
er- the music that has been written
for election of 'officers for the gan,
Is
ed a
•
d ' C II' •
!Ising Women' of' New york and
coming year will be held by the Webster. The gir welcom
InlUre, ,In
0 ISIOn
f for bells, seven new ones· were
!':.e::,lIcMln:at=k!oci~ °a ,made in 1952. Each is to be dediboard of directors within the next new member Into the troop, BarMrs. Jerome J. Bongiovanni of
bara Tatum, who has come to
week or so.
16 Oberlin avenue was admitted working knowledge of club activ- cated to a state or a possession of
To represent the Northwest swarthmore from BaltimO:. th 'to Taylor Hospital, RIdley Park, ities and Is well equipped to talk the United States.
Section of the borough Henry W.
The members of the
0 er~ Tuesday evening suffering from to women's groups.
'
The memoriai money for the first
Coles was reelected for a one-year Committee for this ~~p h ": ' shock and neck injuries sustained
Preceding the program Dr. M. of the seven to be dedicated Yj'as
term and George W. McKeag was Chairman, Mrs. John Espl!ns a e, when her Crosley station wagon J. Blocklyn of Rose Valley will contributed by Reverend Hornby
named for a two-year term.
assisted by Mrs. Herbert
J , H~" was struck In the, rear by a Nash sPesk briefly on tuberculosis and who spent part of hia ministry in
Elected from the Southwest Mrs D. W. R. Morgan~~ . ' sedan driven by Richard D. Mc- Christmas seals. Dr. Blocklyn is Hawaii and wished to have a bell
Section were Henry. L. Bunker for Rob~rt Walker and Mrs.
WIIln Guire of 234 East FIfth street, a radlologlst in Chester and a dedicated to that country.
Mil
es.
Chester.
member of the committee of In?ne year, and Seymour Xletzien
mcumbent, two years.
son of MrS.
The acclden,t occurred about terpreting physlclans of the chest
COMMlnEE TO MEET
The Southeast Section will be
John Maschal, al of Riverview 5:30 p.m., at ~e south end of the survey of ~e Delaware County
Mrs. Frank G. Keenen, presirepresented by three new direc- Charles E. Masch tri to Lowry underpass on Chester road as Mrs. 'rubereulosis and Health Assocladent
of the Woman's Club, has
tors: Mrs. William C. Mcnermott road, made a planene!er Colo., Bongiovanni, ,the 'former Miss tlon..
called
together it nuclewi of the
.for two years and Mrs. Glenn Air Force Baseu,e
Ual- Lotta .Balrd;a_p~ a l~t turn
Hostesses, for the day will be
},farrow and 1'411;. Robert Clothier, as a member of RItI Team to' to enter the Aeme parking lot. Mrs. Robert A. Allison, Mrs. John Club's Antiques Fatr' Committee
one 7ear each;,
"
versllY AFROTC Den!er Utiiver- Following a' hearing befOl'
The r.rortheast Sec"tItm i-eeJected compete with the J bn is a fresh- istrate Morris Smitjl, Mr. McGnire ford, and Mrs.'.Erilest Slnlleld. Tuesday, November 80, at 9:45
..
'
......
~"·e Team· U-~-.......
Gran- was' released in 'bail pending the litis. George' R •. Turne1-' and Mrs. am. at 'the home of 'Mrs. A. W.
0.. Weston Clark lind lIc:irace HOP".......
...y~_..,
Bass, Jr.
Iti1lS to two yeat terms and Allen man at DeniSOn
'
outcome of injuries.
John Burrlss West.:wm pOur,
:,Ohio..
' ' .. '
C
ville,
• WOOd
tor one
Year.
'
•
..
, .....
,-.
.. ;
Co-op Entered, Robbed
During Week-End
Carleton Smith To
Talk Here Tuesday
the tea for the mothers of section
L, with Mrs. Robert Grogan pouring.
The last tea was held by MiS.
William Medford for the mothers
of section K at her home on
Strath Haven avenue. Mrs. Robert
Seely presided at the tea table.
Mrs. Medford is secretary-treasurer and Mrs. Seeley is hospltl!llty
chairman of the group.
A short meeting was held at
each tea presided over by Mrs.
James Cooper, chairman. Mrs.
McQuade announced plans for a
Chr,lstmas party to be for the
eighth grade children on Saturday evening, December 11, in the
High School gymnasium. Three
committees have been chosen by
the children to help with this,
party. Mrs. McQuade also announced plans for a luncheon to
be held at the Ingleneuk in January .. for the mothers of all three
sections.
8: 10
••
1I
Travel' Authority To
Advise Clubwomen
Prop~ty
EDGMONT AVE.' - 7th AND WELSH STS. '
IT'S NO lCCIDEIIT
BUY'
Owners
Name Directors
Deni.:m
•
,
INTENTIONAL SECOND EXPOSURE
Page 12
THE SWARl'HMOREAN
--------------~~~======~----------------~--------~Chosen to Head'
Investment Bonkers
Garnet Team Prepares
For Turkey Class~~
Toke Eighth Straight
Over Prospect
28-0
II
I
(Continued from Page 1)
Savings Bank, Chicago, and three
years later became California representative of Halsey, Stuart &
Co., Inc., with headquarters in
San Francisco. He held various
I positions in the Halsey. Stuart &
, I Co.,
organization: syndicate de. p;lrtment, Chicago office, 1927-28;
sales manager, Philadelphia office,
: 1f)29-32; sales manager, New York
"mee, 1932-37.
He withdrew in 1937 to 01'!:;mizc in Philadelphia, his own
nI'm Schmidt, Poole & Co., prede('{';:~Ol' to the company he heads
tl'c1ay, Schmidt, Poole, Roberts &
Navy Lt, (jg) (,har!e~ B. t,"I'llP;uke, a member of the Philacn, pidured above while ',\,1"\'! delphia - Baltimore S to c k Exing as a crcw mcmb('r of the
Destroyer USS Tla"kl·r. is tllt~ change.
Throughout the years Mr. Schson of Dr. and l\lrs. Frank G.
: midt h.as worked energetically in
KCCllcJl of Harvard u\,cnu('. The
i the interest of the undcrwritipg
Tucker is scheduled tl) ·.. :sit
i and securities business, has held
1I0ng Kong, the Philippine Isi
various positions of leadership in
lands and Japan during tl1(~ curtrade groups, and is widely known
rent cruise.
throughout the financial com~unity. He has served the Investment Bankers Association of
America in numerous capacities:
DeJnClls~ratjon vice-president, 1952-54; governor,
A crowd of interested spectators 1945-47; chairman, Federal Legisoverflowed the west s,tands of the lation Committee, 1946-47; chairSwarthmore High School Gym man, Rights Committee, 1952;
last Saturday night to watch 32 Special Convention Attendance
dogs and their owners demon- Committee, 1953-54; and many
strate canine obedience tech- others.
niques.
The Philadelphia Dog
His interest in the investment
Training Club presented the ex- banking business is also reflected
hibition for the benefit of the in other positions of leadership he
Blind Fund of the Swarthmore has filled: chairman, Eastern
Lions Club.
Pennsylvania Group of the I.B.A.,
Dogs of all sizes from a kiItie 1950, at which time he inauguratand a young cocker spaniel to a ed the I.B.A. Investment Forum
gcrman shepherd. and afghan in the East; District Committee,
hound and several labrador and National Association of Securities
golden retrievers participated in Dealers, 1949-51; and president,
the individual and mass drills of Bond Club of Philadelphia, 1943.
obedience training. A toy french Business. social, and service affilipoodle no bigger than a shoe. ations include: director, PennsylJanet Murray's, Sybil, fascinated vania Gas Management Company;
the audience with her sub-novice Muni~ipal Bond Club of Philaroutine.
Pat
Knowles'
wire- delphia; Financial Analysts of
haired terrier was shown individ- Philadelphia; Financial Advisory
ually in the novice ·class and Committee, Y. W. C. A., PhiladelNancy Grau showed her golden
phia; and Executive Committee,
retriever, Bonnie, in the open
Golf Association of Philadelphia.
class.
Mr. Schmidt has been promiMary Ann Megaree's standard
nently identified with the evolufrench poodle, Vicki, gave an
tion of Invest in America Week
amazing demonstration of scent
and has played a vital role in
discrimination.
retrieving
lost
articles, and following directions. establishing this project on a naTwo 10-year-olds, Rickie I.ager- tional basis. Currently, he is
man with a standard french chairman of the Executive Compoodle and Pattie McDermott with mittee of the National Invest in
a collie, proved that children can America organization.
In the past few years, Mr. Schtr~in and handle dogs as· easily as
midt
has helped in planning the
grown-ups.
executive
development program
The show chairman, Ken Sadler, reports that the financial success of the demonstration makes
possible a sizeable contribution to
the Chester Branch of the Pennsylvaia Association for the Blind.
The Swarthmore Lions Club extends its thanks to Swarthmore
residents and The Swarthmorean
for their support and cooperation
,in again making a Blind Fund
project a success.
The Swarthmore High School
football team continued to roll as
they downed visiting Prospect
Park High School 28 to O. Al- I
though there was no doubt as to
the outcom,:! from the very begin-!
ning. the llomesters were press-l
ed th roughout by " scrappy opponent and their own miscues.
Prospect Park received the
Opening kick-ofT and after three l
plays at the line found themselves I
furthcr back than before. Aggrcs- I
sive and heads up defensive play
rushed the Prospect punter hard,
resulting in a poor kick that onl:;
traveled 15 yards. The Garnet
offense went to work and in a
series of three plays made the first
touchdown. The short p~ss to
Kroon, and end run by LeWIS, and
then Cal Coleman. swept right in
for the first touchdown, assisted
by the blocking of Hummer,
Kroon and Hollander. Pete Kroon
conOlerted hie; 22nd extra point
of the season and the Garnet led
7-0.
Following the resulting kick-off,
Prospect Park offense again was
stopped enId and the visitors were
forced to punt. It is worthy to
nate that the kick-offs by Pete
Kroon kept the visitors in the
shadow of their own goal- posts
on each occasion.
Prospect braced for the next
series of plays and forced Swarthmore's Dick Snyder to punt. The
Prospect safety man fumbled with
a long high kick and as the ball
rolled across the goal line, alert
John Lewis pounced upon it for
the second touchdown. Pete Kroon
("onverted No. 23 and Swarthmore
stood out in front 14-0 as the first
quartcr ended.
The heads up and rugged defensive play caused the visitors to
fumble near midfield, following
the opening of the second quarter.
Charging George Pappas captured
the oval and Swarthmore was in
business again. Good blocking by
Stephani, Pappas and Dellmuth
got Lewis a big chunk of yardage. around left, and placing the
ball on the Prospect Park 15. On
the next play Cal Coleman started around right end as if a repeat
performance of the first touchdown, but as the defense rushed
up the fleet halfback leaped into
the air and tossed to the waiting
arms of Pete Kroon behind the
goal line. Kroon accomplished No.
24 and Swarthmore led 21-0.
Three minutes before the half
ended, one of Swarthmore's eight
fumbles was recovered by the
opponents on the Garnet 35. In a
few short plays, the visitors had
moved to the two yard line but
were denied a great opportunity
to SQl'C as the half ended.
The third quarter was a seesaw affair with Swarthmore having difficulty in bringing a consistent drive. A fourth touchdown
came in the last quarter as Quarterback Malin mixed smashes by
the line by Hummer and Dellmuth
with passes to Pete Kroon. Dellmuth scored his first touchdown
since the Media game and started
to look like his old self. During
this same quarter, the Garnet
fumbled to their opponents twice.
once crossing the goal line and
another time inside the ten.
Again, Ed Noyes and Preston
Hollander took over on offense for
the absent Stu Bowie and Carl
Thomas and did very well, considering their lack of experience
at these spots.
Bud Stephani, Mike Hurd, Allen
Baughn, and Co-Captain Roger
Zensen saw a good bit of action,
along with Mal Tippett, Manuel
Hallier, .John Coleman, Bob Keller, Steven Carter, Lee Gemmill,
George Garrett, Dan Jackson,
John Lang, Andy Jones, Hugh
Morrison and Scott Piccard.
.
r
I·
I
j
of the .,J.B.A., the Institute of In-\
vestment Ban kin g, sponsored'
jointly with the Wharton School I
of Finance and Commerce, Uni- I
versity of Pennsylvania. He has
frequently appeared on the Institute program, both as a lecturer
and discussion leader.
During World War I Mr. Schmidt \""a5 First Sergeant, Company
F, First Gas Regiment, A.E.F " and
saw action at St. Mihiel and
Argonne.
IN HOSPITAL
i
Patricia A. Told of Park avenue, physical education teacher at :
the local school, is in Taylor Hos-I
pita I for observation as a result,
of an accident last week.
FIGHT
--[OJ (0) lenr [OJ ~
T. B.
get you on the Road to
Recovery. But he can Succeed only with your com.
plete co·operation. Accept
and follow his counsel.
And be sure to bring his
prescriptions to us Cor
prompt and precise compounding. Thank you!
Doubled in Decode, But
Not Attracting
Recruits
CATHERMAN'S
DRUG STORE
Buy Christmas Seals
EXPERT MANAGEMENT
down to the smallest detail has mode our service
renowned for 76 years.
•
THE OLIVER H. lAIR CO.
DI.lcrORS o. PUNDAlS
1820 CHESTNUT STREET
MARY A. BAiR. Presldent
Telephone RI 6-1581
!!IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIItllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllil11111111111111 ill
Reach a· New Prospective Buyer Group
FLORENCE GREEN BROOMALL
Swarthmore Specialist
Representing
=
~
:;
FOSTER B. SIMMONS
~
=
§
~
Real Estate Sales & Financing
~
PROVIDENCE ROAD, MEDIA
Wallingford 6-1761
ESTER'S Fashion Corner
BOYS ALL WOOL
TOP COATS
WITH ZIP-IN LININGS
IT'S NO ACCIDENT
PETER E. TOLD
All KInds of Insurance
333 Dartmouth Ave.
Swarthmore. Pa.
Harry R. Draper, M.D., psychiatrist, will address the Rotary
Club's luncheon meeting today at
the Ingleneuk on "The Psychiatrist Looks at Sex Offenders."
Dr. Draper is consultant for the
Skin and Cancer Hospital, Philadelphia, and is conducting research stUdies at the Philadelphia
Association of the Blind. He is
associate
psychiatrist at the
Philadelphia Mental Hygiene Association. He has been the
psychiatric expert on several
criminal cases. Dr. Draper is a
Park avenue resident.
The time may come when
teachers' salaries are of more con_
cern to parents than to teachers
(if there are any teachers left).
This was easily surmised by those
attending
Tuesday
evening's
meeting of the Home and School
Association in the high school
auditorium.
That the time was not yet was
even more obvious from the proportionately higher number of
teachers than parents among the
75 or so who turned out to hear
the heralded report of a survey $200 Taken from Cosh
of teacherst salary standing in
Box and Vending
Swarthmore Sehool District. PerMachine
haps some others will drop into
the local public library and perThe crime wave spread to
use the 39 'pages of comparative
Swarthmore last weekend with
data and charts assembled by an
the burglary of the local Co-op
eight-member committee headed
at 403 Dartmouth avenue some
by W. Newton Ryerson, bound
time Saturday night or early Suninto book form. It was announced
that a capy of the analysis would day. The thief or thieves apbe presented to the Library for parently ent.red through a lavathe convenience of interested res- tory window on the east side of
the building, forced a heavy lockidents.
ed door into the store itself, took
Chainnan' Ryerson and Com$200 cash from a petty cash box
mitteeman John Seybold traced
under the cash register counte. .',
survey conclusions on charts
broke open and robbed a cigarette
flashed upon the stage screen by
John Piccard. George Patterson, machine of its money, ransacked
another lay member of the com- a large, closed but unlocked safe
where records are kept i"n the
mittee, summarized the findings
office,
and escaped through an
into two of a gratifying nature
and two which might cause un- office window on the same side of
easiness. The fact that the rate the building.
A number of checks, ready for
of teachers' salaries on a "years
of experience" basis 'has improved deposit, were left in another unsubstantially in Swarthmore be- locked box near the cash box. A
tween the first years considered locked safe in the store remained
in the survey 1939-40 and the intact with cash and checks inside.
present was deemed favorable, as In ransacking drawers of all desks
also was the fact that in the in the office the thieves came
curr~nt school year local teachers' upon new flashlights and approsalaries had finally gone above the priated a silver and black striped
consumer price index. On the one.
other side, said Mr. Patterson,
The robbery was discovered by
attention should be focused on the
(Continued on Page 10)
accumulated lag of the past ten
years when salaries have been
BROWNIES STAGE PLAY
under consumer prices, and on
the' fact that Swarthmore median
The Brownies of Third Grade
salaries are not increasing at the Troop 560 were invested on Tuesrate of Pennsylvania teachers as day. November 23, at 3:30, at the
a whole, although Swarthmore home of Troop Le~der, Mrs. John
median salaries were in 1939 and Aaron, 633 MagIll road. Mrs.
continue to be today considerably Richard Enion, Troop Leader,
higher than the median for
conducted the investiture.
teachers of the State.
The entertainment for the
Mr. Patterson asked for alert-\ afternoon was a playlet which the
.
Brownies had entirely planned
(Contmued on Page 4)
I and staged. Dressed in period
costumes which the glrls had
made, they acted the Tha?ksgiving Story. "Dinner" conSisted of
1799 to 2299
WARM AND PRACTICAL, A RICH TWEEDY
LOOK MAKES THESE COATS A REAL
MAN'S COAT.
WARM ZIP-IN LINING
SIZES -
6 TO 12
VISIT OUR COMPLETE SCOUT DEPARTMENT
(
N
CHRiSTMAS
SEALS
§
E
=
§
Woma ..'s Club Speaker
Hold 8th Grade Teas
The eighth grade mothers group
held three teas recently with a
total of 72 mothers attending.
Mrs. John Honnold of Rutgers
avenue was hostess for the moth"ers of section B. Mrs. Peter
Kroon, who is telephone chairman for the mothers group, presided at the tea table.
Mrs. John S. McQuade, Jr., of
Moylan, program chairman, held
the tea for the mothers of section
L, with Mrs. Robert Grogan pouring.
The last tea was held by Mrs.
William Medford for the mothers
of section K at her home on
Strath Haven avenue. Mrs. Robert
Seely presided at the tea table.
Mrs. Medford is secretary-treasurer and Mrs. Seeley is hospitality
chairman of the group.
A short meeting was held at
each tea presided over by Mrs.
James Cooper, chairman. Mrs.
McQuade announced plans for a
Christmas party to be for the
Night Address Nov. 30th eighth grade children on Saturday evening. December 11, in the
By Arts Foundation
High School gymnasium. Three
committees have been chosen by
Director
·the children to help with this
Carleton Smith, president of the party. Mrs. McQuade also anNational Arts Foundation, will be nounced plans for a luncheon to
the speaker at a joint meeting of be held at the Ingleneuk in Janthe Woman's Club of Swarthmore uary for the mothers of all three
and the Junior "Woman's Club on sections.
Tuesday, November 30, at 8 p.m.
Mrs. S. C. Harris Dies
After Long Illness
Wellesley Road Woman
Was Noted Contralto
Soloist
Mrs. Samuel Caldwell Harris of
30 Wellesley road passed away at
8: 10 Sunday morning in the
Lankenau Hospital, Overbrook,
where she had been a patient for
several months.
Born Bennie Withers in Charlotte, N.C., 59 years ago, Mrs.
Harris had lived in Swarthmore
for the past 15 years. She was
educated at Converse College,
Spartanburg, S.C., and had taken
advanced private vocal instruction with leading New York music
coaches.
A concert artist ot note, she
was generous with her talent. A
member of the Swarthmore Presbyterian Church, Mrs. Harris was
a faithful member of the church
choir for several years. She was
also a member of the Swarthmore
Woman's Club and her concert
programs bad been enjoyed there.
She loved beauty and was an en-'
thusiastic gardener, decorator, and
flower arranger.
Surviving besides her husband,
who is director of sales of the duPont electro-chemical division, is
This will be an open meeting and
members of the community are
a son, Edwin William, a sophocordially invited. Mr. Smith,
more at Duke University; two sisters,
Mrs. John A. Ferrell, Raleigh,
whom Emily Post calls "Mr.
and Mrs. J. B. Efird, CharN.C.,
Meet--the-People" has chosen as
lotte, N.C.; and a brother, B. F.
his subject "Great Minds and
Will Tell of Way to Trovel Withers, Jr., also of Charlotte.
What They Think."
Funeral services and interment
Smartly on Small
Mr. Smith, a native of the
took place Monday afternoon in
Illinois prairies, is a music critic
Budget
Charlotte, N.C.
of note. He spent two months in
1953 behind the Iron Curtain and
Marjorie Hark~Union Pacific's
two months last summer visiting travel consultant, will speak on Hawaii Bell Dedicated
all along the free side of the Iron "Penny-Wise But Travel-Smart"
Volley Forge
Curtain. Seeking precious manu- at the meeting of the Woman's
scripts of Bach, Mozart, Beetho- Club of Swarthmore Tuesday, NoThe new Hawaii Bell in the
ven, and Wagner, he traveled ex- vember 30, at 2 p.m. She will give Washington Memorial Carillon at
tensively in Hungary, Czechoslo- the latest word on fabrics and Valley Forge was dedicated at
vakia. and the Soviet zones of fashions for travel, telling ho~ to noon on Thanksgiving Day. The
Austria and Germany. He located I plan and assemble an approprIate, address and prayer of dedication
and verified the existence of many but colorful wardrobe for the were given by Reverend Frederick
valuable treasures, including the time~ place, and the pocketbD?k. Bertram Hornby of Swarthmore
MISS
Harker holds a umque
f amoUs "St . Matthew" Passion of
and the gift was accepted by the
..
I
lished
the
fact
that
pos1t1on
among women emp oyees Reverend John Robbins Hart,
tab
B ac.ees
h H
.
'ldSht
priceless manuscripts were being of AmerIcan ral roa s.
e ours Ph.D., Rector of the Washington
'11
II h Id .
f rme Bene- I the country from coast to coast, Memorial Chapel and President of
I ega y
d l'19ht s 0f t rave.
1
. t'
M e tmao
. P I l' d and descrt'b'mg the e
d IC
the Valley Forge Historical Some onas ery ..
In
0 an ,
t
·
·
·
d
ff
I W go r sugges mg desllnahons, an 0 erII th
h
t at a
e OrIgina.
a ~ iug expert and helpful ideas on ciety.
manuscripts given to HItler on hIS
t
f t
I
The Carrillon is housed in the
. hd
. 1 d'
liD
many aspec s 0 rave.
50th birt ay. Inc u mg
as
Prior to joining Union Pacific's Memorial Bell Tower which was
Rheingold" and HDie Walkuere," staff Miss Harker had a versatile originally conceived by Dr. W.
are missing.
promotional background in radiO, Herbert BUl'k, founder of the NaThe National Arts Foundation, television, and motion pictures. A tional Shrine at Valley Forge, as
which Carleton Smith heads. is a native New Yorker, she studied the: Robert Morris Thanksgiving
non-profit organization for in- speech at Columbia University Tower. It was thus thought to be
creasing enjoyment and under- and has appeared. with a number a memorial to Robert Morris, restanding of the arts. It is his \\:ork of Little Theatre groups.
nowned financier of the RevoluHer professional background in- tionary War and an expression of
to originate and administer procider and cookies.
grams to promote such under- cludes Columbia University, the thanksgiving to God for the
The members of this :roop a~e
standing
and enjoyment. He also National Office of the Bay Scouts United States of America.
Jane Aaron, Ann Blessmg. Prlhas his own firm of management of America, and Time. Inc. She
Each of the states contributed
Ten directors were elected by cilIa Brobeck, Jeanne Draper,
consultants
in
New
York
and
was
associated
with
the
March
of
one of the bells and the National
the Swarthmore Property Owners Sarah Enion, Joanny Espenshade,
numbers among his clients large Time as public relations director
Christine
Garrette,
Patricia
Hally,
Association at its annual meeting
been active in the mer- Birthday Bell made a total o~ 49.
insurance companies, prominent and has
··
In order to.
complete
the carillon
in the Woman's Club on Novem- Louise Hay, Julie Huse, Betsy
h
d
c an lsmg an d f as h'Ion Iie Id s.
'
(Continued on Page 5)
Kamp,
Carolyn
Miles,
Carol
Morber 15. A reorganization meeting
As an active member of Adver- and make It pOSSIble to pla~ all
I tising 'Vomen of New York and I the music that has been wrItten
for election of officers for the gan Clare Walker and Nancy
Injured in Collision
the Public Relations Society of I for b~lIs, seven new ones we~e
coming year will be held by the Webster. The girls welcomed a
new
member
into
the
troop,
Barboard of directors within the next
Mrs. Jerome J. Bongiovanni of America Miss Harker has a made In 1952. Each IS to be dedlbara Tatum, who has come to 16 Oberlin avenue was admitted working' knowledge of club activ- cated t~ a state or a possession of
Week or so.
To represent the Northwest swarthmore from Baltimore.
to Taylor Hospital, Ridley Park, ities and is well equipped to talk the UDlted States.
The members of the Mothers' Tuesday evening suffering from to women's groups.
Section of the borough Henry W.
The memorial money for the first
Preceding the program Dr. 1\1. of the seven to be dedicated ,~as
Coles was reelected for a one-year committee for this Troop are shock and neck injuries sustained
term and George W. McKeag waS Chairman, Mrs. John Espenshade, when her Crosley station wagon J. Blocklyn of Rose Valley win contributed by Reverend Hornby
assisted by Mrs. Herbert Huse, was struck in the rear by a Nash speak briefly on tuberculosis and who spent part of his ministry in
named for a two-year term.
Mrs. D. W. R. Morgan, Jr.,. M~s. sedan driven by Richard D. l\Ic- Christmas seals. Dr. Blacklyn is Hawaii and wished to have a bell
Elected from the Southwest
Robert Walker and Mrs. Benjamm Guire of 234 East Fifth street, a radiologist in Chester and a dedicated to that country.
Section were Henry L. Bunker for
Chester.
member of the committee of in?ne year, and Seymour Kletzien Miles. _ _ _- - - The
accident
occurred
about
terpreling physicians of the chest
COMMITTEE TO MEET
Incumbent, two years.
John Maschal, son of ~rs. 5: 30 p.m. at the south end of the survey of the Delaware County
The Southeast Section will be
Mrs. Frank G. Keenen, presi1cs E . lIIaschal of. Rlvervtew
underpass on Chester road as Mrs. ~uberculosis and Health Associa.La
represented by three neW direc- Char
dent
of the Woman's Club, has
d made a plane tnp to
wry
'
tors: Mrs. William C. McDermott ~~ 'Force Base, Denv~r, Col,?" Bongiovanni, the former Miss I tion.
called together a nucleus of the
Lotta Baird, attempted a left turn
Hostesses for th.e day will be
,for two years and Mrs. Glenn
ember of the DenIson Unt- to enter the Acme parking lot. Mrs. Robert A. Alhson, Mrs. John Club's Antiques Fair Committee
Morrow and Mr~. Robert Clothier, as
AFROTC Rifle Team to Following a hearing before Mag- S. Edwards, Mrs. W. Edward Med- for planning an organization on
one year each.
versl Y with the Denver UniverTuesday, November 3D, at 9:45
The Northeast Section reelected C?mpe::e Team. John is a fresh- istrate Morris Smith, :Mr. McGuire ford, and Mrs. Ernest Slnfleld. a.m. at the home of Mrs. A. W.
was released in bail pending the Mrs. George H. Turner and Mrs.
H. Weston Clark and Horace Hop- Slty R t Denison University, Gran- outcome of Injuries.
John Burriss West will pour.
Bass, Jr.
kins to two year terms and Allen rnan a
viJ\e, OhiO.
C. Wood for one year.
alII
EDGMONT AVE. - 7th AND WELSH STS.
that doctor and hospital
bills nearly always c011\e
in following an accidentl
That'. why it pays to bave
Accident Insurance with
full Medical Reimbunement included.
:;
:;
~
'"
§
=
'"
~1IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIOUIIIIIII0I18UIIIIIIIIIUf.!
iii
ROTARY SPEAKER
Co-op Entered, Robbed
During Week-End
ISpectators Applaud
=
THE SWARTHM
I
'1
§
. !I i'
BUY
Teachers' Salaries
Report Given at H&S
Help Fight TB
~
..
VO;'L~U~M;E~2~6~N;'umM;;BE;R~48~----------------SW--A-R-TH--M-O-R-E-,-F-R-I-D-A-Y-,-N-O-V-E-M-B-E-R--2-6-,-19-S-4---------------------$-3.-S-0-P-E-R--Y-EAR~
I
OUVER H. BAlR, Founder
.
L ,"'
(
!1:.0re
• Your Doctor wants to
I
Canine
·'I·"-'''+~
,,).:,: J .... :
HElP
flelp flou",
I
!
8vmrthnore Colleg~ Li lJrRry
-
November 19, 1954
I
Carleton Smith To
Talk Here Tuesday
I
Travel· Author-Ity To
Advise Clubwomen
At
I
"
I
Property Owners
. Narne O·Irect0rs
at
I
I
'I
THE SW~THMOREAN
Pqe2
November
.
26. 1954,
Vasser avenue antertained this ing his parents, Mr. and Mrs.. Paul
Mr. and Mrs. Alexander Scott,
Mr. '1nd Mrs. Milton C. Mapes,
F.
Gemmill
of
Thayer
road
for
the
past month, Mr. and Mrs. Richard
3rd, of Ambler, Pa., announce, the Jr., of The Dalles,' Oregon, an_
holidays.
'S. ,Yates and daughter, Susan, of
birth, of a son, Alexander Keith nounce the birth of a son, Peter
W.
,Gay,
CI
k
G
P
d
Mr'
d
Mr. and Mrs. Owen
.
.
ar s reen, a' l an
. an
Mr.. and Mrs. Percy G. Glibert Scott on November 22. Mrs. Scott Blakeslee, on November 22.
Avonbrook road, Wallmgford,
w,ll M rs. Edmun d T . y'a t es 0,.
.'
. The baby is the grandson of Mr
,
'Sch~n- of J'ar}!: avenue are entertairiing is the daughter of Dr. "ahd Mrs.
leave today for "Little Spruce ect a d y. NY'
as
their
guests
for
ThankSgiving
James
F.
Bogardus
of
Pinecrest
and
Mrs. Elliott Richardson of
..
dinner, their son-in-law and road, Springfield" formerly of Lafayette avenue, and' Col. and
Lake," Lakewood, Pa., for a short
>
Mr.
and
.Mrs.
Paul
R.
Mohney
of
daughter, Mr. and Mrs.' Thomas Swarthmore: 'rhe Scotts also have Mrs. Milton C. Mapes Ilf New
visit.
Drexel Hili and Mr. and Mrs. C?ew of Yale Square, and Mr. a dau hter Deborah.
Haven, "'onn.
g,
..
Mr. and Mrs. R. T. Bates of George L. Vannoy of Marlton, N. Gilbert's brother and family, Dr.
Yale' avenue are entertaining Mrs. J., were Thanksgiving Day guests aild Mrs. C. L: Gilbert of Creeri-"
Bates' mother, Mrs. Mathew of Mr. and Mrs. William S. Hobbs wich, Conn.
,
.,' '
.,'" . . . . : ,
'.
LIt.
Clarke;, and her brother and sis· of Park avenue.. '
Mr. and Mrs. Edward H. Pyle,
. . • :.!. I.l . . : . : :
... ;.-:i'·l.~'~'
ter,iniraw, ,Mr: and Mrs"- John '1.1,
2nd,
and
daughters,
Ann,
Gay,
and
.
presents
'
.
'
,
",'
Alice DeCaindry, daughter of
Clarke and daughter; Vi~ginia, all Mrs. William A. DeCaindry of
Sally Jo, have moved from Pine
, HAMLET
~ '. ~\:'
\.:;
.
•
•
..
' 0 , • ~.' t'
of Fairfleld, Conri., ove.Jhe'week- South Chester road, is home for
Ridge to their newly ,purchased
direc:ted by Barbara Pearson 'Lange
end. Mr. and' Mrs. Russ.m Morgan, Ute holidays from the Univerhome at 211 South chester road,
Martha and Fred of Drexel Hill, sity of Maryland where she is
" CLOTHIER MEMqRIAl HALL " ..
the former' A. S. Johnson house..
,
were di':'ner guests at the Bat... enrolled
Dec:ember
2. 3.4,
'
,8 p.m.
as a freshman.
•
home Wednesday eveniilg.,
Dec:ember 4 - Matinee
,2 p.m•.
Mrs.. William'S. Hobbs has reKay Lannin'g, a student at turned from Physicians Hospital,
$1.00'
ADMISSION
Mr. and Mrs. -Buchanan Harrar Beaver College, is spending the
Watrenton~ and .is conyalescing C\t
,,
(~tudent, admission for Saturday, December 4
of Yale avenue are, entertaining Thanksgiving vacation at home.
her' home- rin 'Park
avenue.
,
Lt. Com. and Mrs. A. J. Papa- Kay is the daughter of Mr. and
$S
$ S $ $ ,% >
Sandra Bowie; daughter of Mr.
george of Fairfax, Va., over the Mrs. Robert Lanning of North
and Mrs. M. 'A: Bowie of South
weekend. The Harrars and their Chester road.
Chester' road, is 'home from 'Oberguests will attend the Army-Navy
,
Mr. and Mrs. James Hornaday lin College", .Oberlin, Ohio, for
football game tomorrow.
of Dickinson avenue are enter- the Thanksgiving h·oliday.
, Sue Harrar, daughter of Mr. taining Mrs. J aines P. Hornaday
and Mrs. Buchanan Harrar of of Washington, D.C." Mi§s Mary
ENGA~EME.NT
:. ...
.
Yale avenue, is home fom De.nison Horaday of New York, and Mr.
,
'BEAtJrY
.
SAtON
Mr: and Mrs., Robert Gardner
.
" '.. -"
....
".
.' " .
University, Granville, Ohio, for arid Mrs. William C. Mithoefer of
Rosegrnnt
of
Vall~y
Head;
'Putney,
-,
Thanksgiving vacation.
Durham, N.C., over the ThanksBEAUTY GRACES THE FESTIVE BOARD
Vermoiit, imnouiice, ·the ' engage. ". ' ".'. - " ..
givitig holidays.
Pvt. Robert H. Bradford, son of
men:t of their daughter, Beth
Mr. and Mrs. Robert P. Bradford
, 9 South Chester Road
Peggy Schumacher, daughter of Taylor, to Michael, Spender Mus'. ' - . -'
,
- . . '" ",
of 400 North Swarthmore avenue, Mr. and Mrs. John Schumacher kat, son of ;Mr. and Mrs. Cha),"les
Call SWarthmore 6.0476
.. .. . , ,
will arrive home tomorrow from of Ogden avenue, is pome from Howson Abbe of NewtOw';, Bucks
I
Ft. Jackson, S. C. for two weeks Grove City College for Thanks€OI,m~.
·J'a.,
'",'
', .'
I~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
leave before reporting to his next giving vacation.
'; Miss Rosegrant" graduated from
~
assignment at Ft. Belvoir, Va.
the Putney School and is iil her
=
David Jenkins, freshman at
,
FAMILY
DINNERS
Co
SUIT
t
••
TASTE
of
EVERYONE
jim!or year: at Smith College:', ,.
;;;
Mr. and Mrs. J. N. Atkins, Chi- Swarthmore College, is spending
TENDER STEAKS and CHOPS Cooked to Order
Mr. Muskat. an' alumnus of the
3
cago, Ill" are visiting their son the holidays at'his home on North George School, is a senlor at 'Am;;;
EXCELLENT
BANQUET
AND
PARTY
FACILITIES
and daughter-in-law, Mr. and Chester road.
herst College, where he is a mem~
. BUSINESS' MEN'S LUNCH 12.1 :30 P. M.
Mrs. Carl Atkins of B'enjatnin
;;;
Mrs. C. D. Howard entertained ber of the Theta Delta Chi fraDINING ROOMS and LOBBY AIR CONDITIONED
;;;
West avenue for ten days.
.
~
§
Mr. and Mrs., E.' H. Pyle and ternity. He is the grandson of
Comfortable
Rooms
Day
or
Week
Elevator
;;;
Mr.
and
Mts.
R.
Chester
Spencer
Mr. and Mrs. Robert M. Grogan family, Mr. and Mrs. E. H. Mack
=
=
;;;
of Westminister avenue enter- and' family of Sprmgfield, and of 330' Swarthmore avenue.
E
tained Mr. and Mrs. Richard K: Miss Mary McGahey of Lans;;;
;;;
downe
at
dinner
on
Thanksgivir;lg
Noye III and son, 'Kirby, of RutFETE BRIDE
;;;
gers avenue, and Mr. Noye's Day.
Yale & Harvard Avenues, Swarthmore. Pa.
Mrs. James MacPherson ,of Rose
=
mother, Mrs. Richard K. Noye
WALTER E. PARROTT. Mgr.
FREE PARKING
Valley entertained a group of
Judy
Ammerman,
dau/lhter
of
,
who lives at the Strath Haven
Dr. and Mrs. Richard Ammerman friends at a china shower In honor
Inn, for Thanksgiving dinner.
of Harvard avenue, -is spending of Miss Nancy Hoot whose marMr. and Mrs. Fred N. Bell of Thanksgiving vacation at' home. riage will take place early in the
Harvard avenue will be host at Judy, a freshman at Elmira Col- spring.
STATE INSPECTION" . PERIOD Ends Jan.' 31
a family dinner on Thanksgiving lege, was recently choserlta memMiss Hoot was also teadered a
college Glee -Club.
Day. Those present will be' their ber of the
surprise shower at the home of
Have your Inspec:ted now
..
son, Neil Bell, a sopliomore at the
Mrs. Donald Bretherick of SpringMr. and Mrs.' Allan C. Wood
WINTERIZE with PRESTON!! or ZEREX
University of North CaroUna,
field. Mrs. Bretherick's guests
returned
to
their
home
on
North
)
home for the holidays; Mr. and
Swarthmore avenue on Sunday' ",ere all college classmates of
ROBERT J. ATZ. OWDer
Mrs. William Bell of Claymont:
Miss Hpoi's. ,
after
several
days,
visit
with
•
their
Mr. and l\1Irs. 'Richard Bell' and
their' 'three children 'of Newark, daughter, ~ Marian Weod, actBIRTHS
Del:;.and Mrs:' Bell's mother, Mrs. ing director of the Union UniverAuto Lite Batteries
, Wheel Balaric:lng
sity
School
of
Nursing
at
Albany
Mr. and ,Mrs. Frederick Morey
George Van Alen, and brother,
Dartm~unth aDd Lafayette Avenues
SW 6-0440
Mr. Oakley Van Alen of Park Hospital in Albany, N.Y.. and of 7 South McAlpine street, Phil"
witq Mr. Wood's cousins, the adelphia, are receiving congratuavenue.
Misses Florence and Marian Din- lations on the birth of a daughter,
Mr. ,!nd Mrs. A.H. Van Alen of widdie of Briar Cliff, N.Y.
Edith Corinne, on Tuesday, NoPark avenue will entertain their
Mr. and Mrs. Wood will have vember, 16, at Jefferson Hospital.
sons-in-law and daughters, Mr.
as
'their guests on Thanksgiving The baby, who weighed seven and
and Mrs. John W. Taylor and
,
" .'
a half pounds a~ birih, is the
daughter, Carol Leslie, ,of Balti- Day their son-in-law and daughgranddaughter of Mr. F ran k
more, Md.; and Mr. and Mrs. John ter, Mr. an!Mrs. John M. ChandMorey of Yale avenue.
ler,
of
Readington,
'N.J.,
and
the
W. Sprout and children, Johnnie
Chandlers'
two
children,
Gall
and
and Ronny, of Peddie SchOOl,
Allan.
'
Hightston, N.J., over the ThanksMRS. LLOYD E. KAUFFMAN
giving week-end.
Gordon G. Power, Jr., grandson 318 Dartmouth Avenue
of Mrs. Albert N. Garrett of Gar- SwariWnore 6-2080
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Ryan of
Westdale avenue visited in Sum- rett avenue, came in first for SIJBSORIPTIONS
Swarthmore College In the cross- FOR ALL
mit, N.J. last weekend.
country event of the Swarthmore- MAGAZINES
,Eleven members of the Thimble Haverford College track meet. Order Now for Christmas
.I
Group met at the home of Mrs. Gordon, whose home is in Monk- Pay In ;January
Charles" D. Mitchell of Walling- pon, Md., is a sophomore at '"=============~
Swarthmore College.
i'
ford on Monday, November 15.
Personals
I
I
jii:iia:c~~i:i:iiii=~ii=~~a:ii~~~iiii:ii:iii:iiiiiij
COLLEGE ,DlrI'IRE., .CLUB. '
o
"
., _
"s 's
T:!i2;~ :;~ ,l!e,e:Tt:~ ~ ::;1.°'":::<::;$'tiel
The Bouquet
~
-~'
,
• _
I.
-.
..
_
"
('
~".
e
STRATH HAVEN INN
~
-
.
~
.
,
Russell's Service
,
,
-
,
Christmas
'Gifts
Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Brown and
Mr. and Mrs. F. H. Forsythe of
Thayer road are entertaining at their children of Newark, Del.,
a cocktail party before the series visited Mrs. Brown's mother, Mrs:
Ellwood H. Garrett of Priitceton
dance on Saturday night.
avenue on Thiulksgiving -Day.
Mr. and Mrs. George Schobinger
Mrs. Jos. F. Gaskill, Jr., the
of Swarthmore avenue are fiying
former
Bicky , Thompson
of
to Detroit to spend Thanksgiving
Swarthmore,
has
left
for
Alameda,
. with their son, John Schobinger,
Calif., where she ,will meet her
and his f;1mily.
husband; Lt. Jos. F. Gaskill, Jr.,
Dr. and Mrs. John R. Bates of who has, been on ... ' round-theNorth Chester road attended the world cruise.
Princeton - Dartmouth game in
Mr. ij,obert F. Gemmill who is
Princeton, N.J., last weekend.
teaching at Washington and Lee
Mr. and Mrs. O. J. Gilcreest of University in Lexington, is visit-
COLLEGE THEATRE
Swarthmore. Pa.
AIR CONDITIONED
Use Our 1.ay-Away Plan
Lala T.....r
"BETRAYED"
(IN TECHNICOLOR)
A 8r1II-paclclfd tare tln\ecl II Holland
Abbott &
~stel'.
'~J.d:
I.
.,...: ...
Ieonta'
.
··
Ike.) for child,..·. show
Sat.
p.m.
cartooes. conMd, allCl
SI\.T. NIGHT ONLY-'-FUITURES _10
THEATRE PHARMACY
Sun., Mon •• & Tues.
THEATRE SQUARE
t
pI-s_
Trader Tom ......al
,.
.
Joe. w,Iaa.
"MAGNIFICENT
OBSESSION"
,
.r'.1••' II
liN TECHNICOLOR)
0.. of fIte
FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE
of ... .......,..
I.
OPEN every evening, except Saturday, 7 to 9
. n: , •.111. to 6, p.lII.
Daytime Hours (from Dec:ember
,
A,-.CE BARBER -
GIFTS .
I
..tsta.... pe" ..... au.
MAlLON ..... _
by
THE SWARTIIMOREAN
PUBLISHED EVUY FRIDAY AT, SWARTHMORE
PETER E. TOLD, MARJORIE TOLD, PUBLlS~B~A.
PhoDe SWarthmore 6-0900
Rosalie Peirsol
, PETER E. TO~, Editor
Marjorie Told Ellen S. S,'mon
Sally Alden
Entered as Second CI8lIII Matter, January 24 1929 t th P t
Office at Swarthmore, Pa., under the Act ~f M;;"~h 3,e 18~.
DEADLINE-WEDNESDAY NOON
CHRISTIAN S~IENCE NOTES
SWARTHMORE, PENNA., November 26, 19M
......
,
.,...,.. ............ "".0 __
..........
TRINITY NOTES
Mrs. H. Miller Crist, and the
memory verse is JQhn 14:6.
On Wednesday, Scout Troop 3
meets at 7 p.m., and all Official
Board Commissions at 8 p.m. at
the church.
.
Choir rehearsals are on Thursday for the Cherub-'Choir at 3:30
p.m., for the Junior Choir at 4,
and for the Chancel Choir at 8
p.m.
The Boys' Choir will rehearse
on Monday at 4 o'clock, followed
by the GIrls' Choir rehearsal at 5
o'clock. The Boys" Choir will
again rehearse on Wednesday at
4 p.m., and full choir rehearsal
will be held at 7: 30 p.m. Thursday.
A service of Evening Prayer
will be held at 5: 30 p.m. Tuesday and agaiil on Friday at the
same hour.
The vital importance of detecting the false suggestions of evil
and correcting them with th"
spiritual truth concerning God's
uhfailing goodness and all-power
will be stressed at Christian Science services SundayJ when the
Lesson-Sermon is entitled "Ancient and Modern Necromancy,
Alias Mesmerism and Hypnotism,
Denounced."
The Golden Text is from
Romans (8:31): "If God be for
us, who ca,n be against us?"
An invitation, is extended to all
to attend the services at 11 's.m.
First Church of Christ, Scientist,
Park avenue, Swarthmore.
•
YOUR NEEDS
are expertly and sympathetically
filled at the price .you ••t.
•
.
.
7
'"
SWarthmore 6-3154 ;
.
I
"
'.
••
DlUerou o. 'fUN_S
1820 CHESTNUT STREET
'This Sunday marks the beginning of the Advent Sea~on-the
OUVEI H. lAIR, Found..
MARY i.:.1iAI.. Pr..i"...
season of preparati~n for' the celeTelephone RI6-1581
bration of the birth of Olll' Lord.
At the 8' O'Clock ser.:ic'e ,of Holy
coaununion tliere will oo'.acorporate commWrlon' for "the men
and boy.. of the parish, after
which a breakfast wUl' be served.
At 9: 30 clindren in the' 3rd grade
and up will meet for Church
Save those fallen arches - look no further
school, and those in the 2nd
PRESBYTERIAN NOTES
we have the following in stock:
Grade and down will meet at 11
o'clock. The regnlar service of
On Sunday morning the two
CAMERAS & SUPPLIES
Morning Prayer will, be held at regular Morning Worship Services
11 o'clock.'
" w i l l be held at 9: 30 and 11 o'clock.
E. I. DuPont
Ansco
Those serving as ushers are as The topic of the serinon by Mr.
Weston Meters
Argus
C •B. BlakeW
f a11ows:
, .M. Bush, Bis h op wilI be "0, Where Shall FRIENDS MEETING N07ES
G. E. Meters
Eastman
C. E. Fellows,
C. Hogg, Jr., C. I Find Rim?"
First Day Schoo' classes will all
S. Keller, W. M. McCawley, Jos.
Church School classes and meet in Whittier House next SunSylvania Bulbs
Polaroid
Reynolds, and N. A. Weber. Jack Men's Bible Class and Women's day.
Zeiss
CalhOun will serve as acolyte at Bible Class will all meet at 9: 30
The High School Fellowship,
8 O'clock, and David Bass aad a.m. Sunday morning; the Senior now known as the United FellowPrint Dryers, Paper Cutters, Films,
Robert Watkins are scheduled to Bible Class meets at 10:45 and ship Students, will meet at Pam
Chemicals
.
serve at 11. During the 11 o'clock the' remaining Church School Foster's, 223 South Chester ro~d,
service Patricia Duff and 'Alice classes at,l1 a.m.
.
at 7 p.m. Sunday evening. John
Toys - dolls and games
Haulmer will be in charge of the
Sunday evening, the various Darling will speak about the
nursery.
f.,llelw"hil?S will hold their regular South. On Saturday morning at
Viewmaster Viewers and Slides
The yfing People's Fellowship supper meetings at 6:30 p.m., each 9:30 the Fellowship will have a
Dinky Toys - Tootsie Toys •
wlll meet at 7: 30 Sunday evening. group break,ing'up afterwards for bake sale in tront at the bank
their respective meetings. The for the benefit of a ~erman orTrinket jewelry sets and findings
focus for the Senior High ,Fellow- phanage.
CHURCH SERVICES
American Flyer trains alJd accessories
ship program will be w. India.
Henry Cadbury will deliver the
PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH
H. O. Trains and kits
The Junior High Fellqwship will fourth and last talk in the curJoseph P. Bishop, Minister
meet
for
choir
rehearsal
at
7 and rent Adult Forum series on .the
Pipe Cleaners, Sequins, Construction Paper
John Schott, Associate MInlster
then
have
a
program
of
faith
and
Gospels
next
Sunday
morning:
He
Sunday, November 28
Shells for, Jewelry - Glitter
fun. The Young Adults meet be- will consider the Gospel of John.
9:30-10:45-11:00 A.M. - Church
fore, supper at Sp.m. for Bible This meeting will be held at 9: 45
Telescopes, 'Magnifying glasses
School.
Study with Mr. Schott as the a.m. in the Meeting House.
9:30 and 11 A.M.-Mr.
aild many other NEW items
, will preach. Sermon topic:
Esther B. Rhoads, long time
leader. After the supper, they
Where Shill I Find Him."
will get together in the Wo,man's ,I Friends worker in Japan, will
9:30 A.M.-Men's Bible Class and Association for a program.
speak and show colored slides on
Women's Bible Class.
6 PARK AVENUE
There will'
be a meeting for Japan at lhe Springfield Friends
6:30 P.M.-You.ng Adults Group.
,
Meeting
House
on
Old
Sproul
6:30 P.M.-Senior High FellowSWARTHMORE. PA.
Members joining the church
ship.
frI. 9 to 8:30
on December 5, to be held in the road on Thursday, December 2, at
SW
604191
., .
6:30 P.M.-Junior High 'i'eUow- Women's Association Room on 8 p.m.
ship.
'
Wednesday evening, December 1,
METfiODIST CHURCH
at 7 p.m. Dessert and coffee will
John C. Kulp
be served.
Miillster
Thursday morning at 10: 30 the
Rudolph ,H. 'Hodge
Day
of Prayer will be held in the
Assistant Minister
church
for all women of the con•
Mrs. RuthG. Nicely
gregation
and their friends. Those
I)rganis~-Director of ,Music
who attend will please bring a
Sunday, November 28
box lunch and coffee ,and tea will
8:45 A.M.-Church S~hool
11:00 A.M.-The Rev. John C. pe 'served, before the
Kulp will preach. Sermon topic: session which will last until 2: 30
"The Time of Deliverance.tI
p.m.
7:00 P.M., - youth Fellowship
A general, meeting of.
will meet:
Ushers' Association will be held
'l'RINITY CHURCH
on Thursday evening at 8 p.m.
H. Lawrence '-.' WhitteJTlO're.- Rector in the Women's Associa~~m Room.
Sunday",!o1oveniber %8
Choir rehearsals will be held at
8:00 A.M.-Holy Communion.
the ,regular hoUrs 'on Thursday
9:30 A.M.-Church School (3r<1,
afternoon 8!ld even.ing... -.
grade and up.)
,
11:00 A.M.-Morning, Prayer. and
METHODIST NOTES
Holy Bapti~l1'I. '
."
11 :00 A.M:-Chtirch School
grade and down.
_' . .
""Junior, in our home we- all at7:30 P.M:.oc.-Young people's 'Fel- iend Sunday School and ,Church,
lowshlp: .. ::"
.
.
and' that in-clud~s you." i~. the
Tuesday, November' ~O
answer.J. :Edgar Hoover says must
5:30 P.M.-Evening Prayer.
be given the child who would lind
Wednesday, D~ember. 1
an excuse for not going to Sun- .
7:15 A.M._HolyCommumon.
day School and Church, and w~th
Friday. December. 3
the same firm iilsistence as Wlt.h
5:30 P.M.-Eveniilg _Praye",r:..:.__ all else for his good: pubhc
•
.'~
THE REr.IGIOUS SOCIETY
school, gooQ, food, bath~, and
'OF' FRn;N1)S
medical, remedies.
SundaY, NoVember 28
.
Our Chlll'ch School meets at
9:45 A.l!,f:-Ad1,1lt ~orum will 9: 45 on Sundays when consemeet in the Meeting House..
crated teachers conduct classes for
9:45 A.M.-First Day School, 10
Whittier House.
"
. all ages beginning at two years.
11:00 A.M.-Meeting for Worship. The teache~ for the Young Ad,..,lt
7:00 P.M. _ United Fellowship Builders Class' will be Dav,d
Students Meeting.
Hurst.
.
Sunday, November 28
At 11 a,m. Morning Worsh'p,
All day sewing for A. F. S. C.
the pastor, Rev. John C. Kulp,
Monday, November 29
will begtn an Advent series of
on the theme: "DeliverAll day sewing for A.F.S.C.
WedneSday, December 1
i
Light"
Community Thanksgiving Serv- ance rfom, Darkness nto
,
ice at TrinIty Church.
with the' subject, ''The Time for
•
FIRST CHURCH OF
Deliveranee," based oh the text,
CHRIST. SCIENTIST
"When the fullness of the time
SWARTHMORE
was come, God sent fort,h His
ParI( A"enue beloW, Harvard
JI G;atians 4:4.
.
.
SlDlday, November ~1
The pastor's office hours for
11:00 A. M.-Sunday School.
rsonal counseling are on TuesHOURS: 10 A. M. TO ,5:30 P. M.
11:00 A.M.-The Lesson-Sermon
pe
8
Will be "Ancient and Modern day 4 to 5 p.m. and 7 to
p.m.
NecromanCy Alias Mesmerism Oth~r hours by appoiniment. Also
and Hypnotism Denounced."
Tuesday is Cottage Prayer
OPEN FRIDAY EVENINc; ,
Wednesday evening meetIng'lVI'eeting at 8 p.m..at ~e .home of
eaob week, 8 p.M. Reading room, J
ond P Wilson
~
daily except Sunday,12.,toto5
aDd Mrs. Raym
•
,
..,• uo
_ Wednesday eWD Inp
11 P ark avenue. The leader
. . is
T*, P.II.. aJidltOl=JoP.II-
FLAT
W:
r
THE CAMERA & HOBBY SHOP
For Christll1as
Giving. • •
f
"
Holiday HitS in flattering
. fashions
will be welcome "finds" under
her Christmas Tree
-15 South Chester Road
I
Alllple FREE 'arid.,
.
THE OLIVER H. lAIR CO.
,
''VIVA 'ZAPATA"
T..rs.. Fri.. & Sat.
A . . . ., ... a ...... .".,.. . .
,
-.
"THE HOLLY" THlIVY"
.... tIIIs . . . _
* * *
,
CALL FORand DELIVERY SERVICE
Wed.O.ly
All
Beginning December 1 the shop ,will be
TO T,EASURE
Fridoy & Saturday
Clark Gable
,
THE SWARTHMOREAN
26, 1954
"-
'
r_
November
EVERY
•
THE SWARTHMOREAN
Page 4
"I saw it in The Swarthmorean."
NEWS NOTES
CREMATION
William D. Ziegenfus, son of
Mr. and Mrs. William C. F. Ziegenfus of Dickinson avenue, and
a sophomore at Amherst College
in Amherst, Mass., was initiated
into Beta Theta Pi social fraternity at the college last week.
,
Cremation permits the holding
of funeral services under cover,
away from wind and rain. The
religious service of your choice.
Inquiries invited.
Mr. and Mrs. John Moore of
Whittier place will have as their
guest, her mother, Mrs. Joseph
Whiteside of Claremont, Calif.
Mrs. Whiteside arrived on Tuesday and will visit through Christmas.
WEST LAUREl HILL
CREMATORY
' 'Il10''
u •••
An. abov.· City
lala-Cy.wyd
Richard K. Alexander, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Alexander
of Swarthmore avenue, will be in
Philadelphia this week-end attending the Anny-Navy footbali
game. Richard who is a plebe
at Annapolis will be at his home
for dinner fOllowing the game.
Life is Good
Diu, tl!anks until III'
Jjorll, for )I, t& glloll:
(J
for Jlts
Ultrrll
mburrtIJ
forrDrr.
.
A .,,,,_ " tt. /Jest ,Ht
0 •• ca. "y. at C'rlstma. "....
Bible GMt Center
1"sAr.MS CVII••
PAULSON & CO.·
106 E. 9th Strut
CH.,te, 3.2396
Swarthmore. Pa,
~~~iiiii~~iii~~~~~~~~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~
~
November 26, 1954
Teachers' Salaries
Report Given at H & S
.(Continued from Page 1)
ness in avoiding future inadequacies and pointed qut that nationwide median salaries for
teachers, $3600 to $8200, are considera~ly lower than the approximate estimated $11,000 for doctors, $7500 for lawyers and $7100
for dentists. He said that in
1951 Americans qevoted only 1.8
per cent of the national income
to public education' while about
three times that much went for
cigarettes and twice the amount
for alcoholic beverages. '
One of the survey's six tables
shows that Swarthmore teachers
earned an average of $2141' in
1939 (computated on a 10 month
basis) as compared to $1241 in
manufacturing (12 month basis).
This superiority has continued
but with a lower differential so
that today the local teacher average is $4342 and manufarlurlng
stands at $3684, the first having
gained 102.8 per cent iil the 15
years and the latter 296.9.
'
Other fables and charts repict
in detail how Swarthmore salaries
the report was for presentation
of fact only, and did not aim to
give answers or advice.
"Audience
questions
as to
Swarthmore's teacher per pupil
ration, plant expenditure and
such, compared with other areas,
were answered by members of
the committee including High
School Principal Willian:> Bush,
,School Board President Donald P.
Jones. Two members of the faculty who served on the committee, Myrtle McCallin and Harry
Oppenander were absent from the
platfonn.
Henry Hofmann on behalf of
the Teachers Association thanked
the committee for its commendable accomplishment, thanked the
School Board for the consideration it has given the salary question in the past and expressed 85surance of a continuation of a,
congenial working out of the
problem.
Ask to impart the national aspect of the problem Dr. William
E. Arnoid, director of the University of Pennsylvania's Educational
Service 'Bureau, congratulated
Swarthmore on its leading with
a union district which" he hopes
mated at It per .,";,nt.
With 1,_
000,000 addltional pupils eaCh year
35,000 additional teachers will b.
needed. A very serious shortage
is due in the next ten years. Since
many who have prepared for
teaching are entering other fields
for better remuneration, competi_
tion should not be between, districts but between fields of endeavor to attract the needed personnel.
November 26, 1954
-
NEWS NOTES
her children, Linda and Tomm Carleton Smith To
Russell Snyder, son of Mr. and and Mrs. George A. Hansell of
returned to their h
in
y,
Mrs. Russell Snyder of Dickinson Swarthmore a v e n U e. Susan's
ome
East
Braintree M
Talk Here Tuesday avenue, is home from Wesleyan roommate, Alice Graftan of Bell.' . ass., after several
weeks VlSlt with Mrs. Solimini's
(Continued from Page 1)
University, Middletown, Conn., fiower, Cal., accompanied Susan
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ray Harlow
for the Thanksgiving holidays. home for the holidays.
industrial leaders, labor unions, His roommates, Dan Anthony of
of Lafayette avenue.
and forelgo governments.
Newtown, Mass., and Helmut
How C",.t/all S.,.... Hea',
Claire Hendrixson, daughter of
Mr.
Smith
was
trained'as
an
Haschek
of
Germany,
are
visiting
Mr. and Mrs. LaRue Hendrixson
"THE REMEDY FOR
of North Chester road, is home economist. He graduated from the him for the vacation period.
from Smith College for the holi- University of Illinois, University
Susan Hansell, a freshman at NEIGHBORHOOD TENSIONS'
day season. Mrs. Barbara Glick of ''Chicago, Foreigo Service Dickinson College, is spending the WIP 1610 -tiC, Suday,
of Cleveland, Ohio, also a stu- School or. Georgetown U.rlversity, holidays with her parents, Mr.
dent at Smith, is a house guest and the London School of Eco;!IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIOIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIOIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIInnnUDI
at the Hendrixson home.
nomics. His travels as a journaMrs, George A. Hoadley and list have taken him to many lands Ii!
Miss Florence Hoadley of Walnut and given him opportunity for
•
lane are spending Thanksgiving interviews with great minds all
with Dr. Alfred Hoadley in River- over the world, among them Winton, N.J. Dr. George Hoadley of ston Churchill, Nehru; Albert EinRaleigh, N.C. visited his mother, stein, Trygve Lie, Albert SchweitMrs. George A. Hoadley, last zer, the late Queen Mary of Engfo':
weekend.
land, Sibelius, Laurence Olivier,
G. B. Shaw, and John Dewey.
Before the war Carleton Smith i
spent three summers in the same
house with Hitler. He has twice E
interview the late Soviet dicta- §
and
tors, whom he told that It is im- ~
possib,le to buget inspiration on a
Five Year Plan. His extensive =
travels, some 42,000 miles record- !i.
ing folk songs in the Soviet Union, ii
=
and his personal acquaintance =
with leading artists everywhere
make Mr. Smith particularly well
qualified to speak on various
phases of the arts.
Mrs. John R. Bates of North
Chester road entertained at iI
luncheon on Friday in honor of
Mrs. Donnan Wilson of Asheville,
N.C. Mrs. Wilson Is a, cousin of
Dr. J. Albright Jones of Swarthmore avenue~
1,.___________-.
John Maschal, son of Mrs.
Charles Maschal of College avenue is spending the Thanksgiving
holiday at home. John is a freshman at Denison University. Gran_
ville, OhiO.
,.<15 .....
;
Carolyn Schott entertained members of the high schOl:Jl senior
class and their dates at' an open
house Friday evening after the
Senior Ball.
Help Fight TI
i
(;':;;::N:n:
Christmas Seals
5
for
years of
of experwill be
forerunner ofof smalmany =
iencecomparable
exceed "those
Bucks, more
sucha combinations,
~
;=
Chester, Delaware and Montl!om- ler school districts. He said, ''The 5
ery Counties both in 1953-54 and salary survey is fine but when it 5
is
in 1939-40, although this does not is allover' the teachers are not ~
§
hold true for individual subclassi- much better, off than otherwise:
fications of teachers for all years This is not a problem facing
of experience.
Swarthmore alone, but one which
In 1953-54 Swarthmore is al- has reached a state of seriousness ~
§
most identical to others in its attracting 'national. concern. The =
suburban group like Abington, number of freshmen entering
Cheltenham, Haverford, Lower teaching courses at University of
Merion, Radnor and Upper Darby Pennsylva",ia is the lowest in ten 5
ARE YOUR ANTlQIIIS
5
both in starting salary and an- years. youth finds it can make
PROTECTED?
nual increment., Yet it has sig- more money to start by driving 5
5
niftcantly improved over its 1939- trucks, it rates livelihoods by the Yon can insure yoar an=
40 position with respect to the. top, not by the median salaries.
tiq;'. farnitnre, allvlr,
~
four counties and the six suburDr. Arnold said that while the § painting., tap.atrl.. or
!iii
ban districts studied.
median teachers sala"'; compared = other works of art against
=
As John Carroll, Home and favorably now it wa~'~ot sufficient 5 practi~lly aU riUa of
§
School president and a member for recruIting. However, graduate
lo.. ,~ damage. Au about
!iii
of the survey committee, said, the enrollment holding its own indi- ;;;_:1_
Fine ArIa . ---==i
__
committee did an exhaustive job I cated teachers in service remained
-J'
in its eight months of collecting' Intereste,d in improving themand assembling material so that selves. He stated it was not en- 5
5
local discussions of teachers' sal- tirely a case of ablIlty to pay, ii'
5_=
aries could become based no fact claiming tax structures" especially iii A.U L'
fI
rather than fancy. Questionnaires when based on low realty assess~ 0 . m""aJIee ~
were issued to 72 districts. Almost ments milke it difficult to run any333 Dartm"uthiAve. -. ~
three-q1iarters
were' retUrned, thing better, than '100 years ago ii
"Swarthmo"~ Pa. ' ,~' !iii
with information on 4600 teachers when the public school was per. ...
=
for the current school year and mitted rather than encouraged by
SWarthmore 6-1833
e
1700 for 1939-40. It is not pos- the State. He, cautioned that
sible to be absolutely conclusive America was spending the small- I!!
§
in an analysis of so complex a est percentage of nationaI' income;;; A1M
......
~
subject with so many variables on education, of all the western a
:
§
involved. It was also stated that nattons. Russia's rate was esti- i.llll1mUUUllllllUllllllllllllllmIlIllIllIUlIUIIIIIDIIIII~
IT'S LATER THAN YOU THINKSO GIVE IMMEDIATE THOUGHT TO
=
_-=1
=~_-=
=1
=
1
1
1
=1
=
~
~{!tvuU
e
=
the friendly patronage
~
!!I"IIII1D1I"UlHlllllmlllunllmlllmnllllmmlmmlll~
Ii!
tHANKING YOU
;
Mrs. Lawrence V. Solimini and
, BUY
Page ,5
THE SWARTHMOREAN
MICHAELIS COLLEGE PHARMACY
,
on the corner in Swarthmore
WE DliLiVER
SW 6-0857
I
your
~e
=
Mrs. C. R. Phillips of Strath
Haven avenue, is a newly elected
WE FEATURE FINE QUALITY GIBSON CARDS
suggesting early shopping
member of Phi Sigma Kappa fraternity at Dartmouth College
where he is a sophomore. John is
majoring in Chemistry and is a
member of the collego band and
the Players, campus theatrical organization.
'"
Chri::~as
I
i
needs
;a
:I
1Jta.ue '!)~
i
=
104 Park Avenue
E SWarthmore 6.2513
=
.=
~lIInllllllllllllllnlllnllllllllllllll;lIIl11ll11ll1nlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll1l1111111111111fii!
E
§
~~li~ ~.ks"
Peter E. Told
i
It', fun to have .xtra money ave, the holi
and have a nice check waiting for you at ..
,ima ";I,on you need it the most.
,
Saving the Christmas Club way is easy and it's
!
fun.
II
=
i
~
1
All you do, is save a convenient amount regularly each week for 50 weeks. Then next Novem'ber you will receive your Christmas Club Check
and have a head start finC!ncially towards your
holiday shopping.
New-'fashioned Tor the, world to Tollow'
It's the smart way to play Santa without money
worries or to prepay a wonderful winter holiday
trip.
Here's how easy it is:
CHRYSLER'S NEW lOO-MILLION-DOLLAR LOOK
•
yOU
ABE LOOKING AT
I
the most taIked-about new
ear in ~ ~ this dazzling Chrysler is com-
~b~:~ a.:d dramatically diiferent.
You can get
$ 25 ___________ If you deposit $ .50 a week
$ 50 ___________ If you deposit $1.00 a'week
$100
If you deposit $2.00
$150
If you deposit ~.OO
--------..
$250 _ ____ ______ If you deposit $5.00
$500 __________ If you deposit $10.00
-
a week
a week
a week
a week
Our J955 Cllrisflllas Club is now open
Ie Sure to Join
BIG EW'55 STUDEBAKER·
CO
DE V-8
.Jr
'"
Now in dir.. ct competition
with the very lowest priced V-8s!
World's greatest .V-8 value!
BIG
SAVINGS
It brings
p e totallY tIBIO fashion in motorcars.
you a
hrysIer is incbes lower in ita sweeping
The new C
asbed free of clutter. Its sleek new
ailhou".tte. ~I Look will make you fullike a
:'11... the instant you step inside I
hl0o-dredMiJIi::illIiO~
un
b' ---;~cen" new
And in performance, 'too, t IS u"",_ "-
'n
NEW PowerFRte Range-$eledOr on
dash replaces steering--column contrail
Chrysler demonstrates Ita great superiority. AU
Chrt/8Iet. are ,1IIW1 V-B JIOIDfMl-with engines up Ie
250 bp. Here is PowerFlite, the only fuUlJ-Ilutomalic no-clutCh drive that worka ;without jerking
or "time lag." Here is the added safety of double.
width pedal Power Brakes, and the feather-light
control of Full-time Comal Power Steering.
No other ~ on tbe road can olrer you sO muCh.
VISit us today and see why now, more than ever
before, the PO'oet afleadership is !loura in a Chrt/81et 1
NEW wider brake pedal lets you
apply power Brake$ with either foot)
NEW '"Twi~Tower" fall-lighb ••• big
and bold ••• say"Stopl" dramaHcally.
•
Come drive
Amerlcers most
smartly' different car!
NEW Super-ScenIc Wlnd.....1d with
posh swopt bode for safer vision'
NEW ultra·iv.-Intarion •.• MW
fabrics ••• nowcolon.Rldiestlnanycari
FOR YOU
\
,
THE FIRST NA
BANK
OF DELAWARE COUNTY
"':___=-_,SWARTHMORE OF!ICE ~ ,
,.
C ••n.r
.........n A.....
-....---
.~oad
See Studebalcer's big, high-powerecl, new Champion, tooand the ultra-'uxurious new StuJebalcer Pr.s;d.~f V-B'
Studebaker... stlllUlell ktter meuIe... ;"ot1IIIIIIJI'IIIIIImJOll tnuIe!
,FUSCO MOTOR COMPANY
C•• der .l1li hi: .... loath
HANNUM
Chester Road
Yale Avenue a~~d:... ;'" " . " ,
& WAIT E
SWarthmore 6·1250 -
6-1251
N',n........-"-- ",;.. 1 o~ ...
November 26, 1954,
Page 6
Roofing
Guttan
Air Conditioning
Heating
011 - Gas - burnen
G.eorge Myers
200 W. Ridley Ave.
Ridley' Park
SW 6-4742
WA 8·2440
Authorized Distributors
for
ATLANTIC FUEL OIL
and
IRON
OIL
Help Fight TB
THE EDITOR
..
==============~
r
Springfield
Loundrorilat
way goal.
toward" the effort to reach
our
Rev. A. N. Clark, Pastor
KI 4.0252
R.....arkl .... Lo_R.... 1!.tra••~
ALBAN PARKER
Pbon~ Media 8-8sM
r~~~~~~~~~~~
Driveway Canstructlon
Asphalt or' Concrete
Cellar Walls Re-Plastered
Phone Swarthniore 6·2526
Camera & Hobby Shop
6 Park Ave.,
. Swarthmore
.'
.',
"
.
SWEENEY & CLYDE
.
29 EAST 5TH ST., CHESTER
4·6313
4·6314
Samuel D. Clyde, Jr.
Samuel D. Clyde
~1II1II1II1II11II1I1II1II1I1II1II1II1II1I1II1II1II1II1II1II1II1I1II1I1I1II11II1I1I1II1II111I1II1I1I1I1II1I1I1II1I1I1I1I1I1I1I1I1II1II1111111111~
-
..•
, i
1_ i
"
Business. location,
December .1,
SWarthmore 6-3050.
FOR. RENT
FOR RENT-Room, kitchen prlvileges for. women in teachers
apartment. Call SWarthmore 6-
Rose ,Tree.
8907.
.,.
,
,
S~ndwiches - Casseroles
- Salads
.'
..
SWarthmore 6-3138
Television & lJadio Senice
CONSTRUCTION
,
. RESIDENTIAL AND
COMMERCIAL
Alterations
335 Dartmouth Avenue
J. F. BLACKMAN
SW 8-6618
0' r."e.
Comp'." Stoet
for Hom. Repa'",
ROBERT BROOKS
S¥W 6·3889--lVe.. Day.
Ev••• & Sa.day
Charles E. Fischer
CLASSIFIED ADS
FOR SALE
FOR SALE - Excellent top soil.
$10 load., Mushroom, soil. $20
load. Call SWarthmore' 6-2078.
FOR SALE - Upholstery cloth at
wholesale prices. Thorn Seremba. Upholsterer. Phone Sharon
Hill 0734.
;;FO~R;"::';S;;'Ai=,,"J,"'''''--=---:O'''n-e--=-24"'''~'~b-oy-'-s
,bicycle $10. and one 20" boy's
bicycle $5. Call SWarthmore G3151 after 6.
F~oiiR,.!:iS;;AriLf.,E~=--L"';:·o:':n-:e~l-"'O"'g=a-u-g-e
,trams; Many extras. Best ofter.
Call Klngswood '4-0Ul9.'
FOR. SALE _ Junior size girl's
English bicycle. Excellent con"
dition,; ,New tires. Current rider
outgrew it. Available before
Cl1ristmas. SWarthmore 6-7173.
FOR SALE _ Cherry chest of
'drawers, antique candle stand.
Decorate with Allison's Antiques.
PAINTING
and
. CARPENTRY'
SWarthmore 6·B761
MARGE HURD··'
~
4-6312
.. '
~=====~~==~=~
from Dennison College for the r
!
Phones: 4·6311
"
University place is arriving home
hollday week-end.
!!IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIiIlIlIllIllIIlIllIllIllIlIllIlIlIllIIllIlIllIlIlRlIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIIIIIIIIIIIlIIIIIIIIIIIIlIIIIlII11111111111111111111115
Mr. and Mrs. Milan W. Garrett
of Princeton avenue visited Dr.
A Comple,e Insurance anrl Real Es'ale .Agency
and Mrs. John H. McClendon of
Air and Ship Travel
Newark, Del., on Thanksgiving
Day.
Jack Prichard
TOYS
Mary Woelfel, a freshman atl~==========~=fl
Swarthmore College, will enter- II
tain Swarthmor" High School
For a "reelsharp"
classmates home from college at
lawnmower
an open ,house 'at her home on
ColJege avenue this evening. .
Call
Sally Gask111, daughter of Mr.
REELS HARP, SW 6-4100
and Mrs. Joseph F. Gaskill of
Small Motor Specialist
PETER 01 NICOLA
~
CHester 4-6246
New and BeboUt Plan..'
and Bepalr\DI' SIDIle 1808
I
~
=
SWarthmore 6·6455
PIANO TUNING
Mr. and Mrs. Courtney, B.
Adams, Black Acres, Media, will
~=======:::===~ entertain
,Mrs. Owen
Adams'
.:
Mr. and Mrs.
B. parents,
Gay of
'$wal'fll.,o •• 6-1448
Walliogford, at dioner Th~giving
Day.,Dr. JamesR. Gay aad
WILLIAM BROOKS
Mrs. Gay of Bethlehem will also
A.he. & Rubbish Removed ~ dinner guests at the Adams
LaWlis Mowed, General
home.
Mrs. T. C. Brown of Kirksville,
Ha~
;23:8;;B;a;r;di;n;I':;;A;v;e;.,;;;o;r;&O;D;';P;"~ and
Mo., is visiting' her son-In-law
,d,lUghter, Mr. and ,Mrs.
George Woelfel of ColJege avenue
Jewelry Repaired
Phone: SW 6-4216
until December 1.
EMIL SPIES
Mr. and' Mrs. Peter Miller, Jr.,
Watc• .,alier
of Marietta avenue had, as their
Form.rlr of F. c. Bod. &: Sons
Fine Watch and
128 Yale Ave. guests last· weekend Mr. Miller's
Clock Repairs
Swarthmore, Pa.
mother,- Mrs. Peter Miller of
':.;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;~
Bronxville, N.Y. and Mr~. Luther
I
Speer of Washington, D.C.
Guaranteed, Standard Coal
Buy Christmas Seals,
NEWS NOTES'
504 laltl.,ore .1••
and heating equipment
Service aval/able to our
customers on all m'all:es of
011 burners
Level payment plan on oil
bills. Automatic deliveries
of 011 during the heating
s,ason
1m. W. Rumford Co.
Builders
I
WANTED
WANTED - Woman for general
housework and ironing. Three
mornings per week: Monday
Wednesday, Friday, SWarthmror~
6-1472.
.', .
WANTED - 26" bid's bicycle in
good, condition. Call SWarth
more 6'-3323.
WANTED-- Lantern slide (magic
lantern) • postcard size. Also
garage vicinity chester road and
Yale. SWarthmore 6-5274.
WANTED - Day work or part
time or ,sleep-in job. Reliable
references ..Call CHester 2-S055.
WANTED - Driver-salesman to
sell eggs in Swarthmore. Choose
your own hours. Write ,Mountain
Brook Farms, Box 175, ,Ljtitz,
PERSONAL
'
PERSONAL Television, radio
and appliance repairs -., prompt
service .. TV sets repaired in the
home; Robert BrOok,S, SWarthmore 6-3889.
'
PERSONAL ,- Bendix home appliance ,service. Washers, driers
Pa.
roorrt . and dmmg 1:0am:, kitchen;
Swarth.more 6-2253
,
EDWARD G. CHIPMAN
AND SON
GENERAL CONTRAOOR
Tile Floon - Plastic Tile
Modern Kitchens
1401 Ridley Avenue
CHester 2-4759
. 2·5689
FuscolMotor o.
,
CHESTER and ,AIRYIEW ROADS
.
a Bird
Realtors
..
'IIOII.SWartlllno.....3681
PREYEI\ITioN SERVICE-
SW 6.0108
Opposite Borou,lI HaD
J
WEEKEND OF NOVEMBER 27, 1954
Does save time and inconvenience•
•
CO-op JUICES
GOOD VISION;
Does your windshield wiper wipe clean? ,
EXHAUST SYSTEMRe1l:le",ber, you c!rive with wi.ndows closed; carbon monoxide fumes from leaky exhaust can -be dangerous.
LARGE CANS
•
4S~
APRICOT
TOMATO JUICE
PINEAPPLE
29c
39~
Co.Op
ANTI-F~EEZE
.
Just putting in Anti-Freeze is not enough; cooling oyStems
TDlI'EM
ARE YOU ONE Of THE 3 PERCENT WHO
. HAS TAKEN CARE OF HIS CAR?
State ("'pactlon Started November FIrst
•
I
•
Premium
SALTINES
. Co.Op,
.
Igean 19c
PUMPKIN
------------~----~--~------~
Co-Op
SWEET POTATOES
HANNUM & WAITE
SPANISH OLIVES
-.
'
.
Kraft's,
SW·6-4041
Yale Ave. & S. Chester Rd.
81lNDAYS and HOLIDAYS
SWarthmore 6-1250
COAL
. FIREPLACE WOOD
SWqrth",ore 0-\"
Strained or Whole
WINTER LUBRICATIONDon't make your c~r work against stiff oil and grease.
NOON
J. A. GREEN.
CRANBERRY SAUCE
should be checked.
tlONDAY TBRlJ SATliRDA~
Baird
FOOD MARKET
To st~p on wintry roads you must have ft:a.c
51 Soutll. Morton ave-
Swarthmore and ViCinity
Many Attractive Ho~es Available_
FOSTER B. SIMMONS
Do You Know ••••?
TIRES and WHEEL ALiGNMENT-
OIIiHEAT
POW R-
Ii,'"
"Iteratl~ns
p r i vat e bath and entrance. nue. Call SWarthmore 6-3312.
SWarthmore 6-5032:
. PERSONAL Young
FOR RENT _. Comfortable 2nd ,employed at college. available
11¥IUIIESTfR RD.-sw.6i450
. flOO,r room. ~ot and cold water. evel?-in~s as baby sitter~ KlngsSWARTHMOitE, PA.
.
In prIvate family. SWarthmore 6- wood 3-1S97.
6513."
, "
, .
PERSONAL--Alter~tions, Fittiogs
FOR RENT - Furnished room for
by appointment In your home.
man. Second floor. in suburban Assoeiation with Estelle Dress
home: 501 Thompson Avenue, Shop, 69th Street. SWarthmore 6- L,---~--------",
,
Springfield. Call SWarthmore 6- 4.::9..3,,4,:,,'
4429 for information.
PERSONAL - Baby sitting. Re, LOST AND FOUND
sponsible woman. Call SWarth==~::.;;...,::;;.:.::.-=-:=;:::::.-__ more 6-4251.
FOUND-Small sum of money on Iip~ER~S;'O""'N;:;AL~'---=--;P<:r:::a-::ct"ic-a-'-l-n-u-rs--e
~~
'Rutgers Avenue,Tuesday. Call
wants work as companionFive day week. Eight hO)lr
SWarthmore 6-0182.
FOUND-Saturday, man's yellow
SHerwood 8-1278.
oe. _ _ ••
I C .ura CII.,.....:u
sweater. Call SWarthmore 8180S.
Charles "Hodson of Sycamore
LOST - Red Boy's Bicycle. Sch- Mills Road, Media, RDl, would
winn 26" size with basket on like work cooking and serving
front and speedometer. Removed meals. First floor work only. We
DAY and NIGHT
from the high school bike racks, have the very best references
November 17. Reward offered. from lovely ~omcs io New EngOIL BURNER
Call Mr. Morey, SWarthmore 8- land, where we have been recently.
4800.
SERVICE
==.---.;,=::--:c=-..,.......-
IIMeL I.
of
ironers. Factory trained service~
K~nmore.
II ~!~E~ !!!~~~
403 DARTMOUTH AVENUE
BUILDING CONSTRUCTION
New Premium Bason",
an older age). This, she feels, portugal has a rather large overgives t~e child greater indepen- seas colonial empire and unlike
many countries has not l06t much
HEA~S, EXPERT dence and earlier maturity.
of it by colonies gainiog their inThe public schools in England dependence.
European and· American modes
are
for those who cannot pay for
The three experts felt that the
of life were discussed by a panel
education.
The average middle nutritional level of the people
of experts in "Meet the Press" at
class send their children to pri- was comparable to Americans.
recent meeting sponsored by
Swarthmore Mother's Club. The vate schools. Only children above Refreshments carrying out the
board consisted of Kimberly Rob- average ability go to the private European theme were served by
erts. head of the 'department of schOOls.
Mrs. Edward Cornelius and Mrs.
In dlscussing current events, Roland Coit.
modem languages ,at Cedarcrest
College:'AlIeniOwn, who has trav- Mr. Hornik thought that Mendeseled extensively in France and France has gained the respect of I!1IIDIUIlHIIIIIIlUlllllllnUUIUIIDlllllllllmlllllHllAl1lllii
recently in Portugal; Henry Hor- the French parliament and the ~
PlauR! FRAMING
nik, instructor at Haverford Col- French people. They feel he rep- ~
PORTRAIT STUDIO
lege who recently returned from resents the peaceful revolution
PHOTOGRAPHIC
Eljrope where he had'a'Fulbright against lethargy. Mr. Hornik ~
stated
that
the
French
people
are
Scholarship for a year's study at
§
SUPPLIES
the Sorbonne in Paris; Mrs. Al- tire!! of receiving help from the i!!
fred Boyd, Dickinson avenue, who United States and feel that they
was born and educated in Eng- could stand on their own feet if
land. The press was represented tarilfs are lowered. '
Dr. Roberts discussed the politby Mrs. Daniel C. Johnson. comMedia
Il'!-ercial manager
a Chester ical stiuation in Portugal where
Open
radio stat~on; Mrs. Knut Krieger, the president is a figurehead and iME 6-2176
fri. EVBi!l
head of the speech department of the country is run by a dictator. F.'.IIIIIIIIInllllllllllllmllllllllllllillIRIIPlllilUlllnUlllll'i.l
the Upper Darby SchoolS who
previously taught at the UniversitJr ·of Pennsylvania; and' ,Mrs.
Reach a New Prospecti"e Buyer Group
John Seybold, a resident active In
community aftairs.
'
Education in Europe varies
FLORENCE GREEN BROQMALL
greatly from education here; more
stress is laid on studies and less
Swarthmore Specialis,
on the personality of £he student,
wll!iam Shirley, manager of the Swarthmore Co·op Market
Mrs. Boyd stated. Childrel) in
shows Patrobnan William Weidner the slore's ash box frorr,
Represen,ing
England' begin school at five. Stu~
which burglars took-more than $Zoo.The manager, who
dents can read English by seven
In Media, I1Iscovered the Iheft on Sunday morning. A clgarett.
and are then ready to start French
machine also was robbed. A safe containing about' $1,000 was
and shortly afterwards Latin.
untouched.
With this method the transition
Real Estate Sales lit Financing
from grammar school to junior
Mr. Fred L. Scott, Jr., son of rently employed at Wakefield high is less difficult for the English student than for United
PROVIDENCE ROAD, WALLINGFORD
Mr. Fred'L. Sc'ott of Swarthmore, High School, Arlington, Va.
States
children,
who
spend
less
received a Master of Arts degree
Kenneth Wright, son of Mr. and
MEdia 6-1761
time on studies in the elementary
•
with a major in Education at the Mrs. LeRoy F. Wright of Kenyon grades. English boys may start
annual Fall Convocation exercises avenue; Bill H. Hoot, son of "Mr. boardiog school at 8 (girls go at
of the George' Washington Uni- and Mrs. Henry Hoot of Lafayette
versity held November 11, in the avenue; and John R. Maschal, son
Llsner Auditorium of the Uni- of Mrs. Charles E. Machal of Rivversity. Mr. Scott also holds a erview road are enrolled In the
Bachelor of Science degree in Ed- Air Force Reserve Officers' Traio~
ucation from State Teachers Col- ing Corps this year at Denison
lege in West Chester. He is cur- University in Granville, Ohio.
MOTHERS CLUB .
•
8UILDER
FOR RENT - Apartment., Two men. General Bendix parts. We
~edr~oms, . C:0Pl~inati~n .living also repair -ABC Whirlepool and
Hits New High in
Knock·Free Powerl
mE SWARTHMOREAN
Swarf~lfJ~re Mark~f Looted
The Wesley A.M.E. Church of
Swarthmore in their recent fall
rally ralsi.d $526.00. We wish to
thank all who cOntributed in any
SLIP COVERS-DRAPERIES
Swa.thma,. R.I".n...
S!!.~.~.~r;: H!!\..~p'!
Box48 SWarthmore6-0740
VAN ALEN BROS.
De~:W::t:r:TO
THOM SERE MBA
UPHOLSTERING'
Sheet Metal Work
QUT .l UTJl1III'OUI<'.l IV
Tnii'
Ho"..rnber 2(1,1954
HORSERADISH
,
'.
'
Kraft's
'MUSTARD·
•
,
\
.-
•
_.
;"..
•
4
,
,
..... 'gc
)11'
.
.'
I
INTENTIONAL SECOND EXPOSURE
,
J\l"1l ..... .n1.. .n-
November 26, 195
THE SWARTHMOREAN
Page 6
LETTER TO THE EDITOR
Dear Editor:
. The Wesley A.M.E. Church of
I Swarthmore in their recent fall
I rally raised $526.00. We wish to
thank all who contributed in any
way toward the effort to reach
our goa\.
Rev. A. N. Clark, Pastor
THOM SEREMBA
UPHOLSTERING .
Sheet Metal Work
Gutters
Roofing
Conditioning
Air
Heating
Oil - Gas - burners
Phon. Sharo. HIli 0734
Mor. than 25 yeort. experience
G.eorge Myers
Box48 SWarthmore6-0740
504 laltlmore Plk.
K14-0252
Rear Par.lng Lof.-Rear Entrance
Mr. and Mrs. Courtney B.
Adams, Black Acres. Media, will
entertain Mrs. Adams' parents.
Mr. and Mrs. Owen B. Gay of
Wallingford, at dinner Thanksgiving Day. Dr. James R. Gay and
Mrs. Gay of Bethlehem will also
be dinner guests at the Adams
home.
Mr:i. T. C. Brown of Kirksville.
Mo., is visiting her son-in-law
and daughter, Mr. and Mrs.
George Woelfel of College avenue
WILLIAM BROOKS
Ashes & Rubbish Removed
Lawns Mowed, General
Hauling
SW 6·4742
WA 8·2440
236 Harding Ave., Morton, Pa.
Authorized Distributors
for
ATLANTIC FUEL OIL
IRON FIREMAN
OIL BURNERS
Jewelry Repaired
Help Fight TB
Phone: SW 6-421&
Buy Christmas Seals.
29 EAST 5TH ST., CHESTER
Phones: 4-6311
4-6312
4-6313
ALBAN PARKER
PhonlP' Media 8-3555
Jack Prichard
TOYS
and
6 Park Ave., Swarthmore
CARPENTRY
!~=;:::::==========~
SaMuel D. Clyde. Jr.
George Plowman
/
-
...
-
--........
FOR SALE
FOR SALE - Excellent top soil.
$10 load. Mushroom soil. $20
load. Call SWarthmore 6-2078.
FOR SALE - Upholstery cloth at
wholesale prices. Thorn Seremba. Upholsterer. Phone Sharon
Hill 0734.
FOR SALE _ One 24" boy's
bicycle $10, and one 20" boy's
bicycle $5. Call SWarthmore
3151 after 6.
FOR. SALE _ Lionel 0 gauge
trams. Many extras. Best offer.
Coll Klngswood 4-0169.
FOR SALE _ Junior size girl's
English bicycle. Excellent can...
dition. New tires. Current rider
outgrew it. Available
before
Christmas. SWarthmore 6-7173.
FOR SALE _ Cherry chest of
drawers, antique candle starid.
Decorate with Allison's Antiques.
Business location, Decem bel' I,
Rose Tree. SWarthmore 6-3050.
FOR RENT
6-1
I
FOR RENT-Room. kitchen privileges for women in teachers
apartment. Can SWarthmore 6-
Hits New High in
Knock·Free Power!
New Premium Gasoline
SINCLAIR
POW R-
Fusco:Motor o.
CHESTER and FAIRVIEW ROADS
Phone SWarthmore 6.3681
8907.
FOR RENT - Apartment. Two
bedrooms, combination living
room and dining room, kitchen,
I p r i vat e bath and entrance.
SWarthmore 6-5032.
FOR RENT-- C~om'-cf-or-t~a-'b-7Ie-2~n-d~
floor room. Hot and cold water.
In private family. SWarthmore 66513.
FOR RENT - Furnished room for
man. Second floor, in suburban
hon:e. 501 Thompson Avenue,
Springfield. Call SWarthmore 64429 for information.
LOST AND FOUND
FOUND-Small sum of money on
Rutgers Avenue, Tuesday. Call
SWarthmore 6-0182.
FOUND-Saturday, man's yellow
sweater. Call SWarthmore /l1808.
LOST - Red Boy's Bicycle. Schwinn 26" size with basket on
front and speedometer. Removed
from the high school bike racks,
November 17. Reward offered.
Call Mr. Morey, SWarthmore 64800.
SWarthmore 6-8761
CONSTRUCTION
RESIDENTIAL AND
COMMERCIAL
Alterations
335 Dartmouth Avenue
J. F. BLACKMAN
SW 6-6616
Charles E. Fischer
WANTED
----WANTED - Woman for general
housework and ironing. Three
mornings per week: Monday
Wednesday, Friday, SWarthmror~
6-1472.
_I
BUILDER
I
Baird & Bird
Realtors
Opposite Borough Hall
~~;:~:~:~:;:':::::eact~::i~: i F::~E~~:W ::s:::veB::e~::~L
. . ,I
110
William Shirley, manager of the Sworlhmore Co·op ~Iarket
shows Patrolman William Weidner the store's cash box frorr
which hurglars took more than $200. The manager, who
in Media,. discovered the theft on Sunday morning. A cigarett(
machine also was robbed. A safe containing about $IJOOO was
untouched.
Ii""
Mr. Fred L. Scott, Jr., son of rently
Mr. Fred L. Scott of Swarthmore,
received a Master of Arts degree
with a major in Education at the
annual Fall Convocation exercises
of the George Washington University held November 11, in the
Lisner Auditorium of the University. Mr. Scott ~lso holds a
Bachelor of Science degree in Education from State Teachers College in West Chester. He is cur-
employed at Wakefield
High School, Arlington, Va.
:Cenncth Wright, son of Mr. and
Mrs. LeRoy F. Wright of Kenyon
avenue; Bill H. Hoot, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Henry Hoot of Lafayette
avenue; and John R. Ma.schal, son
of Mrs. Charles E. Machal of Riverview road are enrolled in the
Air Force Reserve Officers' Training Corps this year at Denison
University in Granville, Ohio.
I
greatly from education here; more
stress is laid on studies and less
on the personality of fhe student,
Mrs. Boyd stated. Children in
England begin school at five. Students can read English by seven
and are then ready to start French
OIL HEAT
SERVICE
MONDAY TURU SATURDAY
NOON
SW·6-4041
SUNDAYS and HOLIDAYS
COAL
FIREPLACE WOOD
J. A. GREEN
SWarthmore 6-0740
Swarthmore Specialist
Representing
I;:
FOSTER B. SIMMONS
•
DoYouKnow ... ?
403 DARTMOUTH AVENUE
PREVENTION SERVICE-
WEEKEND OF NOVEMBER 27, 1954
Does save time and inconvenience.
CO-OP JUICES
GOOD VISIONDoes your windshield wiper wipe clean?
LARGE CANS
EXHAUST SYSTEMRemember, you drive with windows closed: carbon mono
oxide fumes from leaky exhaust can be dangerous.
TIRES and WHEEL ALiGNMENT-
APRICOT
TOMATO JUICE
PINEAPPLE
4Se
2ge
3ge
,
To stop on wintry roads you must have traction.
Co.Op
ANTI-FREEZE
Just putting in Anti.Freeze is not enough: cooling systems
22c
CRANBERRY SAUCE
Strained or Whole
should be checked.
RD.-Sw.6·J450
TIMI'E'N
ij
With this method the transition
§!
from grammar school to junior '"
Real Estate Sales b Financing
iii!
high is less difficult for the Eng-'
~
lish student than for United
PROVIDENCE ROAD. WALLINGFORD
~
States children. who spend less _
~
time on studies in the elementary
MEdia 6-1761
iii!
grades. English boys may start
~
boo rd ing school at 8 ( girls go a t ~I1I11I11I11I1I1I11I11II11II1I1I1II11II11I1I1I11I11I11I1I11II1I1I11I11I1I1I1I1I1HIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII1ll1II1II1I1I1I1II1II1Iii!
GENERAL CONTRACTOR
BUILDING CONSTRUCTION
I
FOOD MARKET
Swarthmore 6-2253
WANTED - 26" hir!'s bicycle in ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~I
goad condition. Call SWarth i=
more 6-3323.
WANTED- Lantern slide (magic
EDWARD G. CHIPMAN
lantern) postcard size. Also
AND SON
garage vicinity Chester road and
Yale. SWarthmore 6-5274.
WANTED - Day work or part
time or -sleep-in job. Reliable
Plastic Tile
Tile Floors
references. Call CHester 2-8055.
Modern Kitchens
WANTED - Driver-salesman to
Alterations
sell eggs in Swarthmore. Choose
your own honrs. Write Mountain
1401 Ridley Avenue
Brook Farms, Box 175, Lititz, Pa.
PERSONAL
CHester 2·4759
2-5689
PERSONAL Television radio
an.rl appliance repairs - prompt
serVice. TV sets repaired in the
home. Robert Brooks, SWarthmore 6-3889.
PERSONAL - Bendix home ap. pliance ~ervice. Washers, driers.
noners. Factory trained servicemen. General Bendix parts. We
also repair ABC Whirlepool and
Kenmore. 51 South Morton avenlie. Call SWarthmore 6-3312.
PERSONAL Young woman
employed at college availahle
17~S.(HESTER
evenings as baby sitter. KIngsSWARTHMORE, PA.
\'load 3-1897.
PERSONAL-Alterations, Fittings
by appointment in your home.
Assoeiation with Estelle Dress
Shop, 69th Street. SWarthmore 6,
4934.
PERSONAL - Baby sitting. Responsihle woman. Call SWarthmore 6-4251.
PERSONAL Practical nurse
~~
wants work as companionnurse. Five day week. Eight hour
duty. Call SHerwood 8-1278.
CII. ~I.I· NI CONDiTION'NG OIl _ .....cu
011.. MIll"'. (NI .IJ.H'NU .An. NIATlIi
4:
PERSONAL Mr. and Mrs.
Charles "Hodson of Sycamore
Mills Road, Media, RDI, would
like work cooking and serving
meals. First floor work only. We
DAY and NIGHT
have the very best references
from lovely homes in New EngOIL BURNER
land, where we have been recently.
Swarthmore and Vicinity
Many Attractive Homes Available
SW 6·0108
ROGER RUSSELL
PAINTING
Camera & Hobby Shop
~(~CLASSIFIE~"'~-~s
4-6314
an older age). This, she feels, Portugal has a rather large overgives the child greater indepen- seas colonial empire and unlike
many countries has not lost much
dence and earlier maturity.
oC it by colonies gaining their inThe puhlic schools in England
European and American modes
dependence.
are for those who cannot pay for
The three experts felt that the
of life were discussed by a panel
education. The average middle nutritional level of the people
of experts in "Meet the Press" at
a recent meeting sponsored by the class send their children to pri- was comparable to Americans.
vate schools. Only children above Refreshments carrying out the
Swarthmore Mother's Club. The
average ability go to the private
European theme were served by
board consisted of Kimberly Roberts, head of the department of schools.
Mrs. Edward Cornelius and Mrs.
In discussing current events, Roland Coit.
modern .. languages ,at Cedarcrest
College, Allentown, who has trav- Mr. Hornik thought that Mendes!!I1111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111J!
eled extensively in France and France has gained the respect of
recently in Portugal; Henry Hor- the French parliament and the ~
PIOURE FRAMING ~
nik, instructor at Haverford Col- French people. They fecI he rep- §
PORTRAIT STUDIO §
lege who recently returned from resents the peaceful revolution
PHOTOGRAPHIC
~
Europe where he had a Fulbright against lethargy. Mr. Hornik ~
Scholarship for a year's study at stated that the French people are §
SUPPLIES
~
the Sorbonne in Paris; Mrs.. Al- tired of receiving help from the 5
;
fred Boyd, Dickinson avenue, who United States and feel that they
§
was born and educated in Eng- could stand on their own feet if §
tariffs
are
lowerec1.
land. The press was represented
1__
State & Monroe s t s · 1
=
Dr. Roberts discussed the politby Mrs. Daniel C. Johnson, comMedia
mercial manager of a Chesler ical stiuation in Portugal where §
Open §
radio station; Mrs. Knut Krieger, the president is a figurehead and §ME 6-2176
Fri. Eve~
head of the speech department ot the country is rUn by a dictator. ;;~1I11111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111 n;,;
the Upper Darby Schools who
previ a us Iy ta ugh tat the U ni vcr _ S!!IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII!III~
sity -of Pennsylvania; and· Mrs. =
5:
MOTHERS CLUB
HEARS EXPERT
New and RebuUt Pfanos
and Repairing Since 1908
=I
• SWEENEY & CLYDE
.Swarthmor~ Market Looted
CHester 4·6246
PIANO TUNING
u
PUKe 9
• agel
~11'r" OTU"l.IOnit" A 1\1
THE SW ARTHMOREAN
SWarthmore 6-6455
~:::============~
=
Tnt;'
No".,nller 2(;, 1954
Builders
until December 1.
Mr. and Mrs. Peter Miller. Jr.,
and
of Marietta avenue had as their
MARGE HURD
Formerly of F. C. Bode & Sons
guests last weekend Mr. Miller's
Fine Watch and
128 Yole Ave.
mother, Mrs. Peter Miller of Sandwiches - Casseroles - Salads
Clod: Repairs
Swarthmore, Po.
Bronxville, N.Y. and Mrs. Luther
Speer of Washington, D.C.
SWarthmore 6-3138
and heating equipment
Mary Woelfel, a freshman at
Service available to our
Swarthmore College, will enter-I
II
PETER 01 NICOLA
customers on all malres of
tain Swarthmore High School
For a "reelsharp"
oil burners
classmates home from college at
Driveway Construction
lawnmower
an open ,house at her home on
Level payment plan on oil
Call
Asphalt or Concrete
College avenue this evening.
bills. Automatic deliveries
REELSHARP. SW 6-4100
of oil during the heating
Sally Gaskill, daughter of Mr.
Cellar Walls Re-Plastered
Small Motor Specialist
season
and Mrs. Joseph F. Gaskill of
Phone Swarthmore 6-2526
University place is arriving home
Guaranteed, Standard Coal
from Dennison College for the
holiday week-end.
Television & Radio Service
;21111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111 IE
;;;
;;;
Mr. and Mrs. Milan W. Garrett
Complete Stock of Tube.
for Home Repairs
~
A Complere Insurance and Real Estate Agency
~ of Princeton avenue visited Dr.
ROBERT BROOKS
~
~ and Mrs. John H. McClendon of
Air and Ship Travel
§
§ Newark, Del., on Thanksgiving
SW 6·3BB9-Week Days
EMIL SPIES
Watchmaker
1 O~ ....
Wm. W. Rumford Co.
NEWS NOTES
Swarthmore 6-1448
200 W. Ridley Ave.
Ridley Park
-
I
I
SLIP COVERS-DRAPERIES
Swarthmore RefarenCM
Springfield
LCiundromat
VAN ALEN BROS.
I
~t;.
WINTER LUBRICATIONDon't make your c~r work against stiff oil and grease.
ARE YOU ONE OF THE 3 PERCENT WHO
HAS TAKEN CARE OF HIS CAR?
State 'nspedion Started November First
•
Premium.
SALTINES
Co·Op
PUMPKIN
Co.Op
SWEET POTATOES
28c Ib
Ig can 19c
34e can
Co.Op
HANNUM
&WAITE
49c
SPANISH OLIVES
Kraft's·
Yale Ave. &
s.
Chester Rd.
SWarthmore 6-1250
Kraft's
MUSTARD
,
~
19c
HORSERADISH
,
..
•
Jar 9 c
••
,
P~e
ORPHAN'S COURT OF
DELAWARE COUNTY
NEWS NOTES
PENNSYLVANIA
NoUce of FWnll and Audit of
Accounts
Notice Is hereby ,Iven to belrs,
1.,.._; eredJtors and all per8Ono In_
that accounto In the followInll eststes bave been' filed In the
Ollloe ot the Bec18Ift. of WllIa and
Clerk of Orphan's Court as the case
may be, and that the IllUDe wlU be
presented to t;II.e Ofphanfl' Court of
said COUDty on Monday, December 6,
19M, at 10 o'clock A.M.. B.B.T., tor
conflrmatlon, at ..blcb time the aald
oourt will audit aald accounts, _
exceptlonlJ to tbe same and mue distribution 01 tbe balance; 88ee1ta1ned
to he In the bands or tho aooonntsns.
A.IRBY-Nov.• l, Plrst and Pinal Accout ot Th. National Bank or Lansdown.. AdmlnJatrator.· _ t e or
John AIrey. Decee.oed. . .
BACON-Nov. 3. PJrst and F1na1 Account ot Prancls P: Bacon. Ad..
mlnlstrator. Estate of ltugene
Bacon, Deoeued.
BAYNEUM"--'OCt. 2B. PIrst and PInal
Account of The PbllsdelpbJ.. N ....
tlonal Bank. Administrator. Estate
or Hony L.· B ..yneum. Dec.....d
BEVERE---<>ot. 28. PIrst and PInal Account ot MlChaeI DlNauta, and
Darlo Ted"""". Executors. u/Wm
of Gluoeppe Bevere a/k ... Joeeph
Beaver. lleceaaed. '
BLO~Nov. 3. PIrst and PInal
Account of Adeline R. Blourne.· Admlnl.tratr.tx. Estate ot Louie A.
Blourne, Deceased.
BOWERS-Nov. 1. The Becond and
Pinal Account of Delaware County
Trust Company, formerly the Delaware County Truet Se.te Depoelt
and Title Insure.nce COmpany.
Trustee for Elizabeth D. Manel. ul
WIll or Tom Bl'ay Boweno. De......d.
ElIzabeth D. Marvel. Lite Tenant
died June 12, 19M.
BOYER-No.3, second ACCOUnt of
.John B. Boyer and Thoro W. Mock~
Mary Lou Hodge, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. D. Malcolm Hodge
of Strath Haven avenue, is home
for the Thanksgiving holidays
from Middlebury College. Middlebury, Vermont.
Art Jones. a junior at Wesleyan
University. Middletown, Conn •• is
home for the holidays. Art is the
son of Mr. and Mrs. Donald P.
Jones of 407 Swarthmore avenue.
. David Cox, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Reavis' Cox of Walnut lane. arrived home from Wesleyan University for the Thanksgiving vacation. David is a junior at Wesleyan.
Dr. and Mrs. Donald N. Twaddell of Fairview. avenue will entertain Mr. and Mrs. Arthur S.
Wolcott of Penn Yan, N.Y.. at
dinner Friday evening.
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Smith
and Linda of Picatinny Arsenal,
N.J.; . are visiting Mrs. Smith's
PA.N'I'ELOPULOS-Nov. 3. Flrst and
.. Final Account or Constanse Pontelopulos. Executrtx, Estate ot Tom
Pantelopulos, Deceased. PATTON~. 29. FIrst aDd F\ne.1 Account ot Julia T. P&tton. Admln-.
Istratrll<. Batste ot WIllard S. D.
Petton. D e _ .
PECK-oct. 27. FIrst and Final Account of EUzabeth MacDade. Executrlx, Estate of Mary Ella Peck,
Deceased.
Tl'UBteea u/Wlll of Merle S. Boyer, READ-Oct. 27. Plrst Account of Fla/k ... M..S. Boyer•. Deceased.
dellty-Phlladelphla. TrUst. COmpany;
BRONSTEIN-Nov. 1,· Plrst and PInal
(Succeaaor to PllUadelphta Trust
Aocouht of Martin Bl'OnstA!ln, AdCompany) Trus~ for Victoria. E.
mlnlstrator. Estate or Samuel BronKelly, u/WUI of William F. Read.
ateln. a/k as Sam Bronste1n, De~ceased.
ceaoed.
BRUNKE-Oct. 8, The P1rst nnd FInal
Account ot 'Nellie D. Brunke, Ad..
mtn~tratrlx, Estate of Henry W11Uam Brunke. Deceased.
BRZOZOWSKI-Qct. 23. The First
and Pinal Account ot Natalie Lohrman. ExecutTlx, Estate ot Eml1e
Brzozowski, a/k as EmUy BrzozowBk1, Deceased.
BUCK-Nov. 3. First and Pinal Account ot Frank N. BUCk. Executor,
Estate of George V. Buek. Sr., Deceased.
CALLAHAN-Nov. 3. First and FlDal
ACCOunt of Ralph L. Lindenmuth,
Administrator. Estate ot Leonard O.
Callahan. a/k as Leonard Gerard
Callahan, Deceased.
DiGIOVANNI-Oct. 29, First and
Final Account of GIovanni DiGiovanni and Plerino DIGiovanni.
Admlntstrators, Estate or Francesco
DiGiovanni, Deceased. . - ,
..
PRAME-Oct. '28, I'lrst Account or
Pldellty-PhUadelphla TruSt Com:
, pany and Herbert H. Smith, Execu:tors, Estate ot F. JosepQine· Prame,
Deceased..
HARKINS-Nov. 3. 'Plrst and Final
I Account ot A1.~ert E. Smith, Execu_
· tor. l!8tate or Clara B. Harkins.
Deoee.oed.
HASLEIN.......Qct. 15, Pirst and· Final
· Account or Jacob Haslem. Sid. becutor, Estate of Emma Hasleln, De..
<
ceased.
Nove~ 26, 19~'
THE SWARTHMOREAN
8
.,
.
HAYES---oNov. 3, F'irst and Final Ac..
count of Edward D. McLaughlin;
Executor. Esta.te at Thomas P.
Hayes. Dec.....d.
JOYCE-Nov. 3, Pirst Account of The
, Pennsylvania Company for Banking
,and Trusts, Exeoutor. Estate of
Garrett V. Joyce, J)eC:e&sed.
~Nov. 3, P1rst and :F1nat Ac..
· count at Frank. P. ~otz. Executor,
EBtste ot Paul Klotz; Dece&Bed.
KOONS-Oct. 13. FlNt and Final Account of Helen M. Brown, Executrlx, Estate of Samuel ,D. Koons,
Deceased..'
LAUBACH-NOV. I, F'lrst and Final
Account of Ralph L. Lindenmuth,
,Substituted Trustee, appointed by
Orphans' Court of Delaware Coun..
ty. :May 3, 1964, Estate of Clarence
, J. LaUbaCh, Deceased..
LBWONAS--Oct. 28, Pirst and P1nal
Account ot Ne1l1e LeWOll88,,,Admlnlstratrlx, Estate ot Theodore W.
Lewonas. Deceased.
MacMtTRRAY-oct. 29. :First and
, FInal Account of Miriam M.. Lord.
,Executrix. Estate of Elsie Escher
MacMurray, Deceased.
. McDEVll1~t. 18. First and FlnaJ
Aooount ot Roae A. M"acDevitt. Executrlx, Estate ot James E. McDevitt.
Deceased.
McOEE-Oct. 29, First and PInal Account ot Jobn P. Malloy, and Robert J. MallOY, Executors. Estate of
Me.ry E. McGee. Dece&Bed.
ME8BTQK-oct. lB. The Plnlt and
PInal Account of Delaware county
Trust Company. tonnerly The Delaware COunty TrUst Sst. Deposit
and TItle Insutance compe.ny.
Trustee for Laura
;"/WIII
ot Joseph Measlek. Deoeaoed. Laure.
_Ick. Lite 'I'enant. died May 12.
19M.
MOORE-Oct. 15, F1rst end Final Account of Rev. John J. McKenzie.
Executor, Estate of Harry :Moore,
ajk aa Joseph Harry Moore, Deoe&Bed.
1l0RRIS-Oct. 27. PIn!t and Pe.rtlal
Account of Fran... M&.rg1IMt IIOlrill, Executrix. _ t e of John Bob· art MorrIs, .a/k .. J. Robert IIon1a,
_ok
DO' , o e d . .
MOULTON-NOV. 1. _ _ and PInal
Account 01 Provident 'l'ruat COmpany of Phllade1pbJa, SUbet1_
Trustee. _ t e of E11 .._
R.
IlouIton. Decoeeed.
II.UBLLER--Oct. 2'1. PIrst and PInal
Account or Ilfnn' K. _ . . . . . .
cutrlx. _ I e of xattbew J. 1In.11... De< .. o e d . .
II:YlIRB Out. 27. 'lIle P\rst and PInal
AccoUnt or 'Rle P\rst Rational _
of Do1aware Oounty. Medla, Peim, aylvanJa, _\II«, _ t e or Jom..
II. ..,...., De •• oed.
WiU:
aDd PInal At:-...,. of .1..... Ball Sbeonr. Bncutrill, . . . . . or ~ O.
Do
I
",,-,.,P!nt
BOBINBON~.. 16.
-
November 26, 1954
Mr. and Mrs. S. Milton Bryant
of Bry-Cliff. South· ehes~ road,
entertained Mr. and Mrs. Paul
Lotto and Peter of Wilmington.
Del., Mr. and Mrs..John C. Fawcett of South Chester road. and
Mr. Robert Fawcett· ot.' Newark.
N.J., at dinner on Thanksliivlng
Day.
parents, Mr. and Mrs. D. Malcolm
Hodge of Strath Haven avenue.
Mr. and Mrs. Donald P. Jones
of 407 Swarthmore avenue entertained at a family dinner. party
on Thanksgiving Day.
Dr. and Mrs. Donald N. Twaddell of Fairview avenue have as
their guests this "leek-end Mr.
and Mrs. John T. Handy, Jr., and
children. ot Crisfield, Md.
Sue Goldsmith, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. H. E. Goldsmith of
Sherwood lane, Wallingford, is
home for the holidays from Bucknell University. Sue is a senior
at Bucknell•.
Janet Smith. freshman at Bucknell
University..
is
spending
Thanksgiving vacation at her
home on Oak Crest lane. Wallingford. Janet is the daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. RUssell R. Smith.
Mrs. ·Paul Lotto and son, Peter,
ot' Wilmington, DeL, were guests
last week o.f Mrs. Lotto's parents.
Mr. al;ld Mrs. S. Milton Bryant of
Bry-Cliff, South Chester road,
while Mr. Lotto was in !.pulsville. Ky., on business.
.
Miss Jacqueline Iliff, daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. John Iliff of
Weymouth road, Springfield, is
home for Thanksgiving week-end.
Jackie is employed at the American Diabetes Association in New
York City.
1!l8TATB ot I I _ t B. Douglau. do.....aecI. late ot tbe B
The Swarthmorean, 1954-11
First published as The Swarthmorean in 1929, this newspaper continues to the present day.
1954-11
digitized microfilm
Film P398-P427
Digitization funding supplied by the Swarthmore Historical Society
1954 NOVEMBER.pdf